Anonymous wrote:Why do so many people want their kids to go to "wall street" or be consultants?
Anonymous wrote:Prestige matters in high school and grad school. Undergrad not so much.
Anyway the rankings:
1) Status symbol that reflects intellect and ambition
2) Networking opportunities for graduate school, jobs, and more (4th)
3) Quality of education that includes instruction from noted academics (3rd)
4) Recruiting opportunities, including Wall Street and high-end consulting companies (1st)
5) Family tradition to go to a particular school or type of school
6) Student quality, including smarts, wealth, celebrity, and more (2nd aka find a spouse)
After those 4 I don’t care
Anonymous wrote:So far, it seems like it’s mostly networking. That seems a bit crazy to me because kids at all schools form into groups that are more alike than dissimilar - translation: the poor kid won’t suddenly be hanging out with the rich kid. Also, most people I know who went to elite schools never got a job through a school connection. Yes, the school probably looked good on their resume, but it wasn’t school networking that landed them a position.
Anonymous wrote:So far, it seems like it’s mostly networking. That seems a bit crazy to me because kids at all schools form into groups that are more alike than dissimilar - translation: the poor kid won’t suddenly be hanging out with the rich kid. Also, most people I know who went to elite schools never got a job through a school connection. Yes, the school probably looked good on their resume, but it wasn’t school networking that landed them a position.
Anonymous wrote:1) Status symbol that reflects intellect and ambition
2) Networking opportunities for graduate school, jobs, and more
3) Quality of education that includes instruction from noted academics
4) Recruiting opportunities, including Wall Street and high-end consulting companies
5) Family tradition to go to a particular school or type of school
6) Student quality, including smarts, wealth, celebrity, and more