Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Dh and I both went to elite schools and I would pay extra to send my kids if they are admitted. In my field-- law, some firms and judges (for clerkship) won't even interview if you haven't gone to an elite school.
Yes, you can do very well coming from a state school, but there is much less margin of error with respect to grades/test scores for both grad schools and jobs.
Really? I work in law and we couldn't give two shits about where you went to undergrad. It literally does not matter. Law school, and law school only.
My Ivy League law,school had only a handful of kids from state schools, the elite colleges were overrepresented .
HLS had 188 undergraduate schools represented by 562 1Ls. So, your statement is just BS.
I went to a much smaller elite law school. Look, send your kids to second or third tier schools, it doesn't bother me any. If it makes you happy, go for it.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Dh and I both went to elite schools and I would pay extra to send my kids if they are admitted. In my field-- law, some firms and judges (for clerkship) won't even interview if you haven't gone to an elite school.
Yes, you can do very well coming from a state school, but there is much less margin of error with respect to grades/test scores for both grad schools and jobs.
Really? I work in law and we couldn't give two shits about where you went to undergrad. It literally does not matter. Law school, and law school only.
My Ivy League law,school had only a handful of kids from state schools, the elite colleges were overrepresented .
HLS had 188 undergraduate schools represented by 562 1Ls. So, your statement is just BS.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Dh and I both went to elite schools and I would pay extra to send my kids if they are admitted. In my field-- law, some firms and judges (for clerkship) won't even interview if you haven't gone to an elite school.
Yes, you can do very well coming from a state school, but there is much less margin of error with respect to grades/test scores for both grad schools and jobs.
And that's why I hate lawyers.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:There's a river of power that flows through this country. ... And that river flows from the Ivy League." -Joe Biden
A whopping 18% of US senators went to Ivy League schools for undergrad. Wow, impressive. Not.
Joe himself didn't go to an Ivy League college - he attended University of Delaware for his undergrad, Syracuse for law school.
...and he sent all of his kids to Penn! Obama sent his daughter to Harvard. Clintons sent Chelsea to Stanford.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:There's a river of power that flows through this country. ... And that river flows from the Ivy League." -Joe Biden
A whopping 18% of US senators went to Ivy League schools for undergrad. Wow, impressive. Not.
Joe himself didn't go to an Ivy League college - he attended University of Delaware for his undergrad, Syracuse for law school.
Anonymous wrote:Dh and I both went to elite schools and I would pay extra to send my kids if they are admitted. In my field-- law, some firms and judges (for clerkship) won't even interview if you haven't gone to an elite school.
Yes, you can do very well coming from a state school, but there is much less margin of error with respect to grades/test scores for both grad schools and jobs.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Dh and I both went to elite schools and I would pay extra to send my kids if they are admitted. In my field-- law, some firms and judges (for clerkship) won't even interview if you haven't gone to an elite school.
Yes, you can do very well coming from a state school, but there is much less margin of error with respect to grades/test scores for both grad schools and jobs.
Really? I work in law and we couldn't give two shits about where you went to undergrad. It literally does not matter. Law school, and law school only.
My Ivy League law,school had only a handful of kids from state schools, the elite colleges were overrepresented .
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Dh and I both went to elite schools and I would pay extra to send my kids if they are admitted. In my field-- law, some firms and judges (for clerkship) won't even interview if you haven't gone to an elite school.
Yes, you can do very well coming from a state school, but there is much less margin of error with respect to grades/test scores for both grad schools and jobs.
Really? I work in law and we couldn't give two shits about where you went to undergrad. It literally does not matter. Law school, and law school only.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:For those that don't care about your child getting into an elite, how do you motive your kids to get As, study for SAT, be really involved?
"Dad why do I need to do any of that when slacking off and plane ole Bs will get me into any Tailgate State?"
That's ridiculous on its face. Some people, I suspect the majority of high achieving high school students, have intrinsic motivation. Land the helicopter.
Anonymous wrote:For those that don't care about your child getting into an elite, how do you motive your kids to get As, study for SAT, be really involved?
"Dad why do I need to do any of that when slacking off and plane ole Bs will get me into any Tailgate State?"
Anonymous wrote:There's a river of power that flows through this country. ... And that river flows from the Ivy League." -Joe Biden
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I have never known a person who attended an elite college who was anti-elite either. I didn't go to an elite college but I would like my kids to go if they can.
Is it the Dunning Kruger effect where people don't have any idea or concept of what they're talking about, yet talk freely about it anyways?
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dunning%E2%80%93Kruger_effect
I went to a good public college and then transferred into an elite and was blown away. It wasn't possible to imagine what it was like without real exposure. Yet people that didn't attend, no kids attending, not even a sibling or spouse who attended will go on and on about how overrated prestigious colleges are.