Anonymous wrote:All great. All prestigious. All extremely well known to top employers and graduate schools. All hard to get into and hard to excel at.
If you don't know these things, the fault is with you.
These are facts.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:And make dullards envious.
How is that possible when no one has ever heard of these schools?
Lots of people have heard of these schools. It’s a social indicator that you haven’t.
This. Anyone who hasn’t heard of these schools is from flyover country. Or likely not college-educated, if they live on the East Coast.
The reality is people including the educated only know about research institutions. The only people who know about slacs is the people who went to slacs which is minuscule in comparison to the people going to normal universities.
Um, no. People who went to top ten universities like Yale and Princeton have definitely heard of places like Middlebury.
Perhaps not people who went to lower ranked state schools, but people from elite backgrounds have definitely heard of these small colleges.
If you have not hear of them, that shows that you are not from an elite background.
I’m not saying that’s bad, I’m just saying, people who go to top private schools and top universities on the east coast have all heard of these places.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:And make dullards envious.
How is that possible when no one has ever heard of these schools?
Lots of people have heard of these schools. It’s a social indicator that you haven’t.
This. Anyone who hasn’t heard of these schools is from flyover country. Or likely not college-educated, if they live on the East Coast.
The reality is people including the educated only know about research institutions. The only people who know about slacs is the people who went to slacs which is minuscule in comparison to the people going to normal universities.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:And make dullards envious.
How is that possible when no one has ever heard of these schools?
Lots of people have heard of these schools. It’s a social indicator that you haven’t.
This. Anyone who hasn’t heard of these schools is from flyover country. Or likely not college-educated, if they live on the East Coast.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:And make dullards envious.
How is that possible when no one has ever heard of these schools?
Lots of people have heard of these schools. It’s a social indicator that you haven’t.
This. Anyone who hasn’t heard of these schools is from flyover country. Or likely not college-educated, if they live on the East Coast.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:And make dullards envious.
How is that possible when no one has ever heard of these schools?
Lots of people have heard of these schools. It’s a social indicator that you haven’t.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:And make dullards envious.
How is that possible when no one has ever heard of these schools?
Anonymous wrote:How do these four schools differ? What are their unique personas, or all they mainly very similar?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:And make dullards envious.
How is that possible when no one has ever heard of these schools?
Anonymous wrote:And make dullards envious.