Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I think having Ivy degree opens doors.
I've seen my friends with Ivy diplomas get offered job interviews they might not otherwise have gotten if they had a middling university diploma listed in their CV. So even if the jobs are average.... they are protected from job loss during economic downturns in ways that others might not be.
This is important!
How so? I am hearing the opposite. Many Ivy are too embarrassed to admit they are underemployed.
Anonymous wrote:I'm an Ivy grad. Not sure what you think we should be doing, but I'm in a low profile job but with high social impact that helps a lot of people. And I have an incredible amount of freedom as I do it. Is that average in your opinion? I could not care less.
Most of my classmates would probably be ordinary in your view, but highly successful in general. Doctors, lawyers, creative types, authors, professors, etc. Some are in elected office from local to very high up.
There are quite a few bold names both from my class year and from my school that I read about in the papers. Is that just "average"?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I have met multiple ivy degree holders working jobs in high school education, middling research depts, "self employed" scrapping by. Sure there are some high profile ivy leaguers but in the end many end up in same jobs as middling t200 degree holders.
The correct way to view outcome is to think of two Bell curves representing the distribution of outcomes of Ivy graduates and t200 graduates. It is without question that the Ivy Bell curve has a mean that is higher than that of the t200 Bell curve. Both Bell curves have tails representing good and bad outliers (Ivy grads driving Uber/stocking shelves, Ivy grads becoming prominent techies/politicians, t200 grads doing the same). Both Bell curves overlap so you see Ivy and t200 grads working the same role in the same office, creating the misleading impression that the outcomes are similar. What most "local observations" fail to capture is the fact that the Ivy Bell curve is to the right of the t200 Bell curve, suggesting that for any given percentile, Ivy grads in that percentile have better outcomes than those from t200.
Anonymous wrote:I guess op is talking about people like me. It's fine that you have no idea how competitive my middling research job was! Would it be nice to have more money like many many of my classmates? Yeah, sure, on many occasions. But then my day to day would mean doing something less exciting for me at the least, and possibly selling my soul if I went down certain paths. So, I'm good where I am.
Anonymous wrote:Ivies have always been primarily for the wealthy, athletes and nepos. If you are not one of those with a ivy degree, it's just a degree same as from State U.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I have met multiple ivy degree holders working jobs in high school education, middling research depts, "self employed" scrapping by. Sure there are some high profile ivy leaguers but in the end many end up in same jobs as middling t200 degree holders.
The correct way to view outcome is to think of two Bell curves representing the distribution of outcomes of Ivy graduates and t200 graduates. It is without question that the Ivy Bell curve has a mean that is higher than that of the t200 Bell curve. Both Bell curves have tails representing good and bad outliers (Ivy grads driving Uber/stocking shelves, Ivy grads becoming prominent techies/politicians, t200 grads doing the same). Both Bell curves overlap so you see Ivy and t200 grads working the same role in the same office, creating the misleading impression that the outcomes are similar. What most "local observations" fail to capture is the fact that the Ivy Bell curve is to the right of the t200 Bell curve, suggesting that for any given percentile, Ivy grads in that percentile have better outcomes than those from t200.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It has always been like this. Many ivy graduates struggle like anyone else to land their first job or work in their desired career field. This can leave such persons angry at the hard grind they chose versus going to a more balanced school where you can have some life outside the grind.
There is something to be said about going to a lower stress school and rocking it there versus the Ivies's souless grind.
Ivies are not a soulless grind
Anonymous wrote:I think having Ivy degree opens doors.
I've seen my friends with Ivy diplomas get offered job interviews they might not otherwise have gotten if they had a middling university diploma listed in their CV. So even if the jobs are average.... they are protected from job loss during economic downturns in ways that others might not be.
This is important!
Anonymous wrote:I have met multiple ivy degree holders working jobs in high school education, middling research depts, "self employed" scrapping by. Sure there are some high profile ivy leaguers but in the end many end up in same jobs as middling t200 degree holders.
Anonymous wrote:I know several female Harvard grads who quit promising careers to be SAHMs or mommy tracked. My point is that they still have the same issues as the rest of us. A Harvard degree doesn’t shield you from that.