Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I think it makes a difference if you go to a tippy top school. Other than that, the next T50 don’t matter as much. The difference between a school like Tufts or Vanderbilt, say, is negligible even though Vandy is higher ranked. They are both great schools.
I there is another difference once you start past the T100 school. You may have more opportunities graduating from Emory than Appalachian, for instance.
But if you are talking T15-T50, it makes no difference.
You didn't understand my post at all. How old are your kids?
What are you talking about? The pp is spot on.
Sigh. I give up. Clearly you're still in the midst of all of this. Y'all can just go ahead and split hairs between schools and tiers like you always do. As I said, I should have known I was preaching to the wrong crowd.
I'm out.
Just look at the salary outcomes from the school and it obvious that IN GENERAL, higher ranked schools produce better outcomes.
You are mixing up correlation and causation. And also salaries aren't everything.
I don't have kids but I wish I'd had more of OP's attitude when I was deciding on college and law school. There's a lot more to life than going to the most prestigious college you can get into. A LOT. Also I think for a lot of us, some time out of the pressure cooker would give us the freedom to actually figure out what we like instead of just trying to run that same old race.
Anonymous wrote:Looking back, one of my biggest regrets/missteps as a parent was putting way too much pressure on my kids to excel in school with the goal of getting into top colleges. The pressure worked, and they did do well and go "name brand," but fast forward a few years and it really didn't make much of a difference. They're all happy and successful, but so are their friends who didn't do as well as they did and didn't end up at top schools. Time is proving to be the great equalizer.
Just something for parents to keep in mind when they're still in the midst of things. I realize I'm probably preaching to the wrong crowd.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I think it makes a difference if you go to a tippy top school. Other than that, the next T50 don’t matter as much. The difference between a school like Tufts or Vanderbilt, say, is negligible even though Vandy is higher ranked. They are both great schools.
I there is another difference once you start past the T100 school. You may have more opportunities graduating from Emory than Appalachian, for instance.
But if you are talking T15-T50, it makes no difference.
You didn't understand my post at all. How old are your kids?
What are you talking about? The pp is spot on.
Sigh. I give up. Clearly you're still in the midst of all of this. Y'all can just go ahead and split hairs between schools and tiers like you always do. As I said, I should have known I was preaching to the wrong crowd.
I'm out.
Just look at the salary outcomes from the school and it obvious that IN GENERAL, higher ranked schools produce better outcomes.
Anonymous wrote:Looking back, one of my biggest regrets/missteps as a parent was putting way too much pressure on my kids to excel in school with the goal of getting into top colleges. The pressure worked, and they did do well and go "name brand," but fast forward a few years and it really didn't make much of a difference. They're all happy and successful, but so are their friends who didn't do as well as they did and didn't end up at top schools. Time is proving to be the great equalizer.
Just something for parents to keep in mind when they're still in the midst of things. I realize I'm probably preaching to the wrong crowd.
Anonymous wrote:Looking back, one of my biggest regrets/missteps as a parent was putting way too much pressure on my kids to excel in school with the goal of getting into top colleges. The pressure worked, and they did do well and go "name brand," but fast forward a few years and it really didn't make much of a difference. They're all happy and successful, but so are their friends who didn't do as well as they did and didn't end up at top schools. Time is proving to be the great equalizer.
Just something for parents to keep in mind when they're still in the midst of things. I realize I'm probably preaching to the wrong crowd.
Anonymous wrote:I would add say T1-T15 one tier, T16-T25 slight boost, T26-T70 ( and some lower but with better reputations like Marquette) GPA internships and coursework more important than where you attended. My kid only applied to schools T30-T100 got into them all and chose the one closest to home that provided IS tuition. Don’t think 10 years from now my kid is going to do worse than a kid who attended a higher ranked school or better than a lower ranked one.
It’s like a car- they’ll all get you where you want to go but some will have smoother rides. It’s what you to along the way that makes the biggest difference.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I think it makes a difference if you go to a tippy top school. Other than that, the next T50 don’t matter as much. The difference between a school like Tufts or Vanderbilt, say, is negligible even though Vandy is higher ranked. They are both great schools.
I there is another difference once you start past the T100 school. You may have more opportunities graduating from Emory than Appalachian, for instance.
But if you are talking T15-T50, it makes no difference.
You didn't understand my post at all. How old are your kids?
What are you talking about? The pp is spot on.
Sigh. I give up. Clearly you're still in the midst of all of this. Y'all can just go ahead and split hairs between schools and tiers like you always do. As I said, I should have known I was preaching to the wrong crowd.
I'm out.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I think it makes a difference if you go to a tippy top school. Other than that, the next T50 don’t matter as much. The difference between a school like Tufts or Vanderbilt, say, is negligible even though Vandy is higher ranked. They are both great schools.
I there is another difference once you start past the T100 school. You may have more opportunities graduating from Emory than Appalachian, for instance.
But if you are talking T15-T50, it makes no difference.
You didn't understand my post at all. How old are your kids?
What are you talking about? The pp is spot on.
Sigh. I give up. Clearly you're still in the midst of all of this. Y'all can just go ahead and split hairs between schools and tiers like you always do. As I said, I should have known I was preaching to the wrong crowd.
I'm out.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I think it makes a difference if you go to a tippy top school. Other than that, the next T50 don’t matter as much. The difference between a school like Tufts or Vanderbilt, say, is negligible even though Vandy is higher ranked. They are both great schools.
I there is another difference once you start past the T100 school. You may have more opportunities graduating from Emory than Appalachian, for instance.
But if you are talking T15-T50, it makes no difference.
You didn't understand my post at all. How old are your kids?
What are you talking about? The pp is spot on.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I think it makes a difference if you go to a tippy top school. Other than that, the next T50 don’t matter as much. The difference between a school like Tufts or Vanderbilt, say, is negligible even though Vandy is higher ranked. They are both great schools.
I there is another difference once you start past the T100 school. You may have more opportunities graduating from Emory than Appalachian, for instance.
But if you are talking T15-T50, it makes no difference.
You didn't understand my post at all. How old are your kids?
Anonymous wrote:I think it makes a difference if you go to a tippy top school. Other than that, the next T50 don’t matter as much. The difference between a school like Tufts or Vanderbilt, say, is negligible even though Vandy is higher ranked. They are both great schools.
I there is another difference once you start past the T100 school. You may have more opportunities graduating from Emory than Appalachian, for instance.
But if you are talking T15-T50, it makes no difference.