Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:No. Not at all.
Maybe not Duke vs. Harvard or UVA vs. Duke, but you're saying it doesn't matter if you go to Harvard or Longwood? For real?
Longwood Average Salary After 10 Years
$43,200
Harvard Average Salary After 10 Years
$136,700
Anonymous wrote:Being privately educated is being privately educated. Regardless of income.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:NO.
Unless -
1. You wanted to specifically be with a certain organization in the legal, medical or academic profession where the name of your education is paramount
2. You wanted to start in management v. work your way up in which case you go get your MBA from a top B school
3. You wanted to specifically open up networking opportunities at a school - ie you wanted specifically to work for a company that you know does college recruiting out of that school
4. You want to work within corporate finance or CIA/Foreign Service/public sector organization that college recruits specifically from a list of preferred top schools
Otherwise it does not matter where you go to college, from a community college to a college that nobody's heard of -
1. You can absolutely work your way to the top in almost any field.
2. You can absolutely be happy and successful in any industry.
3. You can absolutely earn a TON of money by being successful in your industry. Better yet, own your own business and hire people out of the college you want!
4. You can absolutely be a smart, good or educated person and even all three to boot!
- Signed, a VP of Talent Acquisition, with 20+ years of experience hiring in tech, finance and sales/marketing industries for corporate F100 global and national companies. I have recruited both Harvard MBA morons who despite whatever title they had will always be moron and can't write a resume, and highly motivated, street smart and hard worker community college grads who became C level executives
Bringing this Back. This person makes the most sense out of anybody on this board. It’s so obvious who had the I really go to Quetion here. Their justifying themselves way too much. I trust somebody who actually hires people vs somebody who thinks they should be hired.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Didn’t Colin Jost attend Harvard while Michael Che grew up in the projects in N.Y.?
And they both have the same exact jobs. 🤣
Michael Che went to one of NY's prestigious application-only public high schools, which is an argument for the poster who said secondary eduction is more important.
Also, Colin Jost was a writer for SNL before he was a performer. Not many writers for NBC comedy are high school graduates-only (although I'm sure there have been a few).
Anonymous wrote:Local commuter shithole might hamstring you — but a smart kid will be fine at whatever top 100 university or top 100 LAC they attend. I firmly believe that. I’ve seen it happen over and over. This T25 or bust striver crap on every forum is written by insecure lunatics. I know dozens of rich families with extremely smart kids who didn’t give a damn about Ivies or even the state flagship U. They went to places like non selective LACs, SMU, Pepperdine or even non flagship state schools. They are all successful young professionals. Cream rises to the top.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:No. Not at all.
Maybe not Duke vs. Harvard or UVA vs. Duke, but you're saying it doesn't matter if you go to Harvard or Longwood? For real?
Longwood Average Salary After 10 Years
$43,200
Harvard Average Salary After 10 Years
$136,700
Who’s choosing between Harvard and Longwood? Serious question. If you can get into Harvard, you can get into a lot of schools that aren’t Harvard but that are “better” than Longwood.
So it does matter, within bands at least.
I should have clarified, I’m not the one who said “it does not matter. At all.” Obviously it does matter. But someone who can get into Harvard is likely to get into many other really good (better than Longwood) but maybe not elite schools, will get full tuition offers if they choose the right schools to apply to, and more.
Okay, so we all agree that it matters if you go to Harvard/UVA vs. Longwood/Radford, but it remains to be established if Harvard vs. UVA matters.
You guys can say whatever you want but if I get admitted to Harvard and UVA, I’m picking Harvard. You do you and turn them both down for longwood
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:No. Not at all.
Maybe not Duke vs. Harvard or UVA vs. Duke, but you're saying it doesn't matter if you go to Harvard or Longwood? For real?
Longwood Average Salary After 10 Years
$43,200
Harvard Average Salary After 10 Years
$136,700
Who’s choosing between Harvard and Longwood? Serious question. If you can get into Harvard, you can get into a lot of schools that aren’t Harvard but that are “better” than Longwood.
So it does matter, within bands at least.
I should have clarified, I’m not the one who said “it does not matter. At all.” Obviously it does matter. But someone who can get into Harvard is likely to get into many other really good (better than Longwood) but maybe not elite schools, will get full tuition offers if they choose the right schools to apply to, and more.
Okay, so we all agree that it matters if you go to Harvard/UVA vs. Longwood/Radford, but it remains to be established if Harvard vs. UVA matters.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:No. Not at all.
Maybe not Duke vs. Harvard or UVA vs. Duke, but you're saying it doesn't matter if you go to Harvard or Longwood? For real?
Longwood Average Salary After 10 Years
$43,200
Harvard Average Salary After 10 Years
$136,700
Who’s choosing between Harvard and Longwood? Serious question. If you can get into Harvard, you can get into a lot of schools that aren’t Harvard but that are “better” than Longwood.
So it does matter, within bands at least.
I should have clarified, I’m not the one who said “it does not matter. At all.” Obviously it does matter. But someone who can get into Harvard is likely to get into many other really good (better than Longwood) but maybe not elite schools, will get full tuition offers if they choose the right schools to apply to, and more.
Okay, so we all agree that it matters if you go to Harvard/UVA vs. Longwood/Radford, but it remains to be established if Harvard vs. UVA matters.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:No. Not at all.
Maybe not Duke vs. Harvard or UVA vs. Duke, but you're saying it doesn't matter if you go to Harvard or Longwood? For real?
Longwood Average Salary After 10 Years
$43,200
Harvard Average Salary After 10 Years
$136,700
Who’s choosing between Harvard and Longwood? Serious question. If you can get into Harvard, you can get into a lot of schools that aren’t Harvard but that are “better” than Longwood.
So it does matter, within bands at least.
I should have clarified, I’m not the one who said “it does not matter. At all.” Obviously it does matter. But someone who can get into Harvard is likely to get into many other really good (better than Longwood) but maybe not elite schools, will get full tuition offers if they choose the right schools to apply to, and more.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:No. Not at all.
Maybe not Duke vs. Harvard or UVA vs. Duke, but you're saying it doesn't matter if you go to Harvard or Longwood? For real?
Longwood Average Salary After 10 Years
$43,200
Harvard Average Salary After 10 Years
$136,700
Who’s choosing between Harvard and Longwood? Serious question. If you can get into Harvard, you can get into a lot of schools that aren’t Harvard but that are “better” than Longwood.
So it does matter, within bands at least.