Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Georgetown. They have to take full pay since they have no money
this...show off your wealth in the application. that's one place it won't hurt you.
Anonymous wrote:Georgetown. They have to take full pay since they have no money
Anonymous wrote:I generally consider the schools where there are a lot of rich but non-academically performing kids. The very top schools have more money around to filter out these out in place of the top performers.
Colby
SMU
University of Richmond
Miami
Middlebury
Williams
Sweetbriar
Hampden Sydney
In the past, Vandy, but the academics have improved and it’s a harder admit now.
Anonymous wrote:Any elite school with an per-student-endowment of $800k or above is going to attract a significant amount of FGLI and lower middle class through financial aid. So while schools like Dartmouth, Williams, Amherst, and Bowdoin have a lot of rich kids, they also have a significant portion of poor kids. The real rich-kid schools, IME, are usually in just below the super elite tiers (ranked above T25) but still have cachet and have stingy financial aid because of their smaller endowments--e.g., NYU, USC, Colorado College, Midd, Wake Forest, etc. There are exceptions though--Wesleyan, for example, doesn't have a huge endowment, but is very generous with their financial aid.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Alabama. The amount of money there is mind blowing — Porsches, range rovers, carrying Goyard bags to class, etc. These aren’t the smart (scholarship) kids, but the ones that will go into the family business and don’t really need good grades. But there’s a lot of them.
This is not how real wealth presents itself
These kids are absolutely wealthy. Just not New England wasp culture.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Bucknell is a great school for getting rich after you graduate. The alumni network is fiercely loyal, and tons of grads end up in high-paying jobs on The Street.
Give it a rest already.
+1
To paraphrase Regina George, “Stop trying to make “The Street” + Bucknell happen. It’s not going to happen.”
Seriously, this person is hilarious. They just can’t seem to help themself ….
Anonymous wrote:Any elite school with an per-student-endowment of $800k or above is going to attract a significant amount of FGLI and lower middle class through financial aid. So while schools like Dartmouth, Williams, Amherst, and Bowdoin have a lot of rich kids, they also have a significant portion of poor kids. The real rich-kid schools, IME, are usually in just below the super elite tiers (ranked above T25) but still have cachet and have stingy financial aid because of their smaller endowments--e.g., NYU, USC, Colorado College, Midd, Wake Forest, etc. There are exceptions though--Wesleyan, for example, doesn't have a huge endowment, but is very generous with their financial aid.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote: I work on Wall Street and have literally never heard of anyone who went to Bucknell. Never. If that's your goal and you want a small college, then try Williams, Colgate, maybe Barnard (with Baruch being the real secret door).
What do you mean by “Baruch” being the secret door?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Alabama. The amount of money there is mind blowing — Porsches, range rovers, carrying Goyard bags to class, etc. These aren’t the smart (scholarship) kids, but the ones that will go into the family business and don’t really need good grades. But there’s a lot of them.
This is not how real wealth presents itself
Anonymous wrote:Alabama. The amount of money there is mind blowing — Porsches, range rovers, carrying Goyard bags to class, etc. These aren’t the smart (scholarship) kids, but the ones that will go into the family business and don’t really need good grades. But there’s a lot of them.