Anonymous wrote:It’s irrelevant to me as a hiring manager.
I understand that the person who attended the Ivy may be extraordinarily bright—but that they may also be extraordinarily entitled. Those cancel each other out in terms of how excited I am to talk to the candidate. Relevant experience is the decision factor.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Usually they have jobs waiting for them via their parent/relative’s company or connections.
It’s not just about the degree. It’s about the legions of privileges that enabled you to attend such a school in the first place. (And please none of the rags-to-riches stories - these obviously are not the norm.)
That’s false. You need to meet more actual people not toil in imagination land.
What matters is the Career Services Department, Recruiting, Alumni network and job or grad school placement in your area of interest.
Only some of the wealthy Intl students openly go work at some big fmaily conglomerate in the homeland. But many families require their kids to work 10 years elsewhere to learn more and new things, then come to family company.
It’s way less subtle then work for family business. It’s knowing some executive and recommending your son, and then you hire their daughter etc. it’s also knowing which careers and how to navigate them.
I played D1 lacrosse at a flagship university and I got multiple internships from fellow lacrosse players whose families are very wealthy and connected, and I wasn't even a good student. I just happened to be one the best players on the team and I got along with everyone. After graduation, I got multiple high paying job offers from people I met through internships and families of other lacrosse players, some of them I played against from other universities. I would never get those opportunities without playing lacrosse. My two older brothers attended Yale and Princeton and they make five times less than I do. They wished they spent less time studying and more time with sports.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Usually they have jobs waiting for them via their parent/relative’s company or connections.
It’s not just about the degree. It’s about the legions of privileges that enabled you to attend such a school in the first place. (And please none of the rags-to-riches stories - these obviously are not the norm.)
That’s false. You need to meet more actual people not toil in imagination land.
What matters is the Career Services Department, Recruiting, Alumni network and job or grad school placement in your area of interest.
Only some of the wealthy Intl students openly go work at some big fmaily conglomerate in the homeland. But many families require their kids to work 10 years elsewhere to learn more and new things, then come to family company.
It’s way less subtle then work for family business. It’s knowing some executive and recommending your son, and then you hire their daughter etc. it’s also knowing which careers and how to navigate them.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Usually they have jobs waiting for them via their parent/relative’s company or connections.
It’s not just about the degree. It’s about the legions of privileges that enabled you to attend such a school in the first place. (And please none of the rags-to-riches stories - these obviously are not the norm.)
That’s false. You need to meet more actual people not toil in imagination land.
What matters is the Career Services Department, Recruiting, Alumni network and job or grad school placement in your area of interest.
Only some of the wealthy Intl students openly go work at some big fmaily conglomerate in the homeland. But many families require their kids to work 10 years elsewhere to learn more and new things, then come to family company.
Anonymous wrote:Usually they have jobs waiting for them via their parent/relative’s company or connections.
It’s not just about the degree. It’s about the legions of privileges that enabled you to attend such a school in the first place. (And please none of the rags-to-riches stories - these obviously are not the norm.)
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Usually they have jobs waiting for them via their parent/relative’s company or connections.
It’s not just about the degree. It’s about the legions of privileges that enabled you to attend such a school in the first place. (And please none of the rags-to-riches stories - these obviously are not the norm.)
Probably this. I grew up LMC, went Ivy, and pretty sure my career is same place it would be if I went to state flagship — except maybe I wouldn’t have left my state?
I went to a top 10 SLAC and would say the same. Maybe I got more interviews because of it, but the job I landed was at a company that hired from everywhere
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Usually they have jobs waiting for them via their parent/relative’s company or connections.
It’s not just about the degree. It’s about the legions of privileges that enabled you to attend such a school in the first place. (And please none of the rags-to-riches stories - these obviously are not the norm.)
Probably this. I grew up LMC, went Ivy, and pretty sure my career is same place it would be if I went to state flagship — except maybe I wouldn’t have left my state?
Anonymous wrote:Usually they have jobs waiting for them via their parent/relative’s company or connections.
It’s not just about the degree. It’s about the legions of privileges that enabled you to attend such a school in the first place. (And please none of the rags-to-riches stories - these obviously are not the norm.)
Anonymous wrote:From your experience, do graduates of Top 25 universities and Top 10 liberal arts colleges get more interviews, interesting jobs, or money? I’m talking only about the UNDERGRADUATE degree.
I understand that anyone who goes to an Ivy MBA, law, or medical school will do well, but that’s really about the professional school, not undergraduate.
I’m trying to understand if it’s worth paying lots of money to go to a prestigious private school over a very selective state school for UNDERGRAD.
Anonymous wrote:Usually they have jobs waiting for them via their parent/relative’s company or connections.
It’s not just about the degree. It’s about the legions of privileges that enabled you to attend such a school in the first place. (And please none of the rags-to-riches stories - these obviously are not the norm.)
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:From your experience, do graduates of Top 25 universities and Top 10 liberal arts colleges get more interviews, interesting jobs, or money? I’m talking only about the UNDERGRADUATE degree.
I understand that anyone who goes to an Ivy MBA, law, or medical school will do well, but that’s really about the professional school, not undergraduate.
I’m trying to understand if it’s worth paying lots of money to go to a prestigious private school over a very selective state school for UNDERGRAD.
Depends upon the student's major.
Anonymous wrote:From your experience, do graduates of Top 25 universities and Top 10 liberal arts colleges get more interviews, interesting jobs, or money? I’m talking only about the UNDERGRADUATE degree.
I understand that anyone who goes to an Ivy MBA, law, or medical school will do well, but that’s really about the professional school, not undergraduate.
I’m trying to understand if it’s worth paying lots of money to go to a prestigious private school over a very selective state school for UNDERGRAD.