PaleoConPrep wrote:I've heard Trinity is good for finance. Why does your son want to work with the sleazy pigs on Wall Street?
PaleoConPrep wrote:I've heard Trinity is good for finance. Why does your son want to work with the sleazy pigs on Wall Street?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I went to a NESCAC SLAC, as did my sister and BIL, who both work in finance, as do many of my classmates. There are plenty of students who go from SLACs to Wall Street. It's as well-trod and unimaginative a path as it is from D1 schools.
this - nice job raising a boring and utterly derivative bro, op.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I went to a NESCAC SLAC, as did my sister and BIL, who both work in finance, as do many of my classmates. There are plenty of students who go from SLACs to Wall Street. It's as well-trod and unimaginative a path as it is from D1 schools.
+1 Agree. My brother is an investment banker with a undergrad degree from Carleton. DH also works in finance with an engineering degree from a big state school (and a subsequent MBA). Lots of ways to get to finance, staying there for an entire career and advancing is tough, and those who grit it out into their forties and beyond come from a surprising variety of backgrounds. FWIW, Colgate in another SLAC with good placement into finance.
Anonymous wrote:I went to a NESCAC SLAC, as did my sister and BIL, who both work in finance, as do many of my classmates. There are plenty of students who go from SLACs to Wall Street. It's as well-trod and unimaginative a path as it is from D1 schools.
Anonymous wrote:I went to a NESCAC SLAC, as did my sister and BIL, who both work in finance, as do many of my classmates. There are plenty of students who go from SLACs to Wall Street. It's as well-trod and unimaginative a path as it is from D1 schools.