Anonymous wrote:I am not a troll. I’m the parent of a HS sophomore who is killing themselves excelling in school and participating in extracurriculars to be competitive for T20.
At the same time, I see parents on here posting how their kid went to Cornell and ended up in the same place as someone who went to Pitt or another similarly ranked school.
At the same time, in my job I work alongside people who have gone to ivies and schools I’ve never heard of. I went to Michigan, btw.
My sister did her undergraduate at Oxford, stayed in the UK and is now partner at a well respected consulting firm alongside other partners that went to no name schools from India.
So seeing the stress my kid goes through, I am honestly asking what is the point of a Yale or Princeton if they take you to the same place that a school like Rutgers and Radford can take you?!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:And, wouldn’t you know it …he hates the Ivies as much as Michelin star restaurants. Lol
No he mostly hates Harvard and Columbia. Three of his kids went to Penn.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I am not a troll. I’m the parent of a HS sophomore who is killing themselves excelling in school and participating in extracurriculars to be competitive for T20.
At the same time, I see parents on here posting how their kid went to Cornell and ended up in the same place as someone who went to Pitt or another similarly ranked school.
At the same time, in my job I work alongside people who have gone to ivies and schools I’ve never heard of. I went to Michigan, btw.
My sister did her undergraduate at Oxford, stayed in the UK and is now partner at a well respected consulting firm alongside other partners that went to no name schools from India.
So seeing the stress my kid goes through, I am honestly asking what is the point of a Yale or Princeton if they take you to the same place that a school like Rutgers and Radford can take you?!
Ah, the perennial 'does it really matter?' question from those comfortably outside the velvet rope. Let me illuminate the distinction you are evidently missing.
Your anecdotes about colleagues ending up in the same building or your sister at Oxford alongside Indian partners prove precisely nothing beyond basic competence. Of course raw talent exists everywhere. Pitt, Radford, no name schools in India. The point is not whether someone can succeed; it is how they succeed, where they start, and the effortless glide path provided.
Yale or Princeton are not merely schools; they are global keys to locked doors. They provide:
1. An instant, unassailable brand worldwide. A resume that bypasses HR algorithms and lands directly on the desks of people you will never meet. No explaining required. Ever.
2. A network that is the establishment. Your Michigan peers are fine. My classmates run the firms, funds, and faculties your peers aspire to join. This network is not LinkedIn connections; it is lifetime access to decision makers who answer calls because of the crest on the degree.
3. A concentration of ambition and resources. Your sophomore is stressed? Good. They are competing in the Olympics, not the county fair. At Rutgers, they might be the smartest in the room. At Princeton? They are sitting alongside future Nobel laureates, Fortune 500 CEOs, and Senators. The expectations, the peers, the opportunities, it is simply a different universe of potential.
Does a Pitt grad eventually land a good job? Possibly. Does the Princeton grad walk into McKinsey, Goldman as a baseline expectation? Routinely. The 'same place' you naively observe is often just the starting line for the elite grad, while it is the finish line for others. The trajectory, the ceiling, the sheer ease of ascent, that is what you are paying for. And what your child is striving for.
The 'point' is securing a position where merit is assumed, doors open silently, and the path to the top is not a grueling climb, but a well lit escalator.
If you cannot perceive that distinction from your vantage point at Michigan... well, that rather proves it, does it not?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I am not a troll. I’m the parent of a HS sophomore who is killing themselves excelling in school and participating in extracurriculars to be competitive for T20.
At the same time, I see parents on here posting how their kid went to Cornell and ended up in the same place as someone who went to Pitt or another similarly ranked school.
At the same time, in my job I work alongside people who have gone to ivies and schools I’ve never heard of. I went to Michigan, btw.
My sister did her undergraduate at Oxford, stayed in the UK and is now partner at a well respected consulting firm alongside other partners that went to no name schools from India.
So seeing the stress my kid goes through, I am honestly asking what is the point of a Yale or Princeton if they take you to the same place that a school like Rutgers and Radford can take you?!
Ah, the perennial 'does it really matter?' question from those comfortably outside the velvet rope. Let me illuminate the distinction you are evidently missing.
Your anecdotes about colleagues ending up in the same building or your sister at Oxford alongside Indian partners prove precisely nothing beyond basic competence. Of course raw talent exists everywhere. Pitt, Radford, no name schools in India. The point is not whether someone can succeed; it is how they succeed, where they start, and the effortless glide path provided.
Yale or Princeton are not merely schools; they are global keys to locked doors. They provide:
1. An instant, unassailable brand worldwide. A resume that bypasses HR algorithms and lands directly on the desks of people you will never meet. No explaining required. Ever.
2. A network that is the establishment. Your Michigan peers are fine. My classmates run the firms, funds, and faculties your peers aspire to join. This network is not LinkedIn connections; it is lifetime access to decision makers who answer calls because of the crest on the degree.
3. A concentration of ambition and resources. Your sophomore is stressed? Good. They are competing in the Olympics, not the county fair. At Rutgers, they might be the smartest in the room. At Princeton? They are sitting alongside future Nobel laureates, Fortune 500 CEOs, and Senators. The expectations, the peers, the opportunities, it is simply a different universe of potential.
Does a Pitt grad eventually land a good job? Possibly. Does the Princeton grad walk into McKinsey, Goldman as a baseline expectation? Routinely. The 'same place' you naively observe is often just the starting line for the elite grad, while it is the finish line for others. The trajectory, the ceiling, the sheer ease of ascent, that is what you are paying for. And what your child is striving for.
The 'point' is securing a position where merit is assumed, doors open silently, and the path to the top is not a grueling climb, but a well lit escalator.
If you cannot perceive that distinction from your vantage point at Michigan... well, that rather proves it, does it not?
This is the most embarrassing, striver-y comment I’ve ever read on this site, which is quite the accomplishment. Well done.
Actually, this entire thread is a good reminder of how much this forum is filled with insecure social climbers and desperate immigrant strivers.
Anonymous wrote:And, wouldn’t you know it …he hates the Ivies as much as Michelin star restaurants. Lol
Anonymous wrote:Why go to a Michelin 5 Star restaurant when you can get your dinner for much less at McDonald’s?
Anonymous wrote:Here are some reasons, not all will apply to everyone:
- you get access to the most elite employers (consulting, banking, and private equity) right out of college. After a few years, you can jump into a more senior role at a “regular” company if you want. The training and skills will continue to serve you and propel you forward throughout your career (well ahead of the peers that didn’t have this sort of training)
- you get access to the most elite employers, stay, and make bank
- you will have access to really interesting guest speakers, events etc throughout your time. Like small dinners or cocktail events with Supreme Court Justices, top business leaders, Presidents of foreign nations etc. This sort of thing continues for life via alumni clubs for those interested.
- many of your classmates will be extremely interesting/ unique/ rich and connected. Some will have amazing summer homes and invite you. Others may want to marry you.
- many of your classmates will be passionate about the same topics as you (literature, politics, science, whatever) and you will have great conversations and feel like you’ve found “your people”
- Top 10 schools offer extremely generous financial aid (let’s see if this continues). If you are not upper middle class to wealthy, a top school is likely to be your cheapest option.
- people tend to give you the benefit of the doubt and assume you’re smart, unless you prove otherwise. This means it’s also easier to get job interviews (lots of caveats of course)
- you get to learn from truly brilliant professors - this is true at many universities but imagine studying Economics at MIT vs. your local state school: Nobel Laureates are teaching you instead of “merely” brilliant phd’s
- many/ most elite grad schools consider the rigor of your undergraduate education during admissions (not med school, of course). Top MBA’s in particular are tough to crack if you didn’t go to a very highly ranked undergraduate school.
- you get to enjoy meeting and working with people from all walks of life without feeling threatened / having a chip on your shoulder
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I am not a troll. I’m the parent of a HS sophomore who is killing themselves excelling in school and participating in extracurriculars to be competitive for T20.
At the same time, I see parents on here posting how their kid went to Cornell and ended up in the same place as someone who went to Pitt or another similarly ranked school.
At the same time, in my job I work alongside people who have gone to ivies and schools I’ve never heard of. I went to Michigan, btw.
My sister did her undergraduate at Oxford, stayed in the UK and is now partner at a well respected consulting firm alongside other partners that went to no name schools from India.
So seeing the stress my kid goes through, I am honestly asking what is the point of a Yale or Princeton if they take you to the same place that a school like Rutgers and Radford can take you?!
If they have to work that hard then they should not be doing it and it is not going to be a good fit on the off chance it works.
One of mine went to a private t15 and the other to a T10ivy. Both will graduate with above 3.90 if all holds, prelaw for one and engineering for the other. They took the most difficult courses their HS offered, as the school advisors recommendedthem to do, as they were among the top students. ECs including arts, athletics and volunteering were chosen by them. They still managed to sleep and get top grades: they did not need to put as many hours in as others. Some of the few unhooked kids similar to them also got into T20 and up, some did not . The ones who “killed themselves” ie felt overwhelmed by 10th did not go on to top schools. Stop pushing your kid, if they were ready for ivy+ they would not find it extremely difficult to balance it all.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I am not a troll. I’m the parent of a HS sophomore who is killing themselves excelling in school and participating in extracurriculars to be competitive for T20.
At the same time, I see parents on here posting how their kid went to Cornell and ended up in the same place as someone who went to Pitt or another similarly ranked school.
At the same time, in my job I work alongside people who have gone to ivies and schools I’ve never heard of. I went to Michigan, btw.
My sister did her undergraduate at Oxford, stayed in the UK and is now partner at a well respected consulting firm alongside other partners that went to no name schools from India.
So seeing the stress my kid goes through, I am honestly asking what is the point of a Yale or Princeton if they take you to the same place that a school like Rutgers and Radford can take you?!
Ah, the perennial 'does it really matter?' question from those comfortably outside the velvet rope. Let me illuminate the distinction you are evidently missing.
Your anecdotes about colleagues ending up in the same building or your sister at Oxford alongside Indian partners prove precisely nothing beyond basic competence. Of course raw talent exists everywhere. Pitt, Radford, no name schools in India. The point is not whether someone can succeed; it is how they succeed, where they start, and the effortless glide path provided.
Yale or Princeton are not merely schools; they are global keys to locked doors. They provide:
1. An instant, unassailable brand worldwide. A resume that bypasses HR algorithms and lands directly on the desks of people you will never meet. No explaining required. Ever.
2. A network that is the establishment. Your Michigan peers are fine. My classmates run the firms, funds, and faculties your peers aspire to join. This network is not LinkedIn connections; it is lifetime access to decision makers who answer calls because of the crest on the degree.
3. A concentration of ambition and resources. Your sophomore is stressed? Good. They are competing in the Olympics, not the county fair. At Rutgers, they might be the smartest in the room. At Princeton? They are sitting alongside future Nobel laureates, Fortune 500 CEOs, and Senators. The expectations, the peers, the opportunities, it is simply a different universe of potential.
Does a Pitt grad eventually land a good job? Possibly. Does the Princeton grad walk into McKinsey, Goldman as a baseline expectation? Routinely. The 'same place' you naively observe is often just the starting line for the elite grad, while it is the finish line for others. The trajectory, the ceiling, the sheer ease of ascent, that is what you are paying for. And what your child is striving for.
The 'point' is securing a position where merit is assumed, doors open silently, and the path to the top is not a grueling climb, but a well lit escalator.
If you cannot perceive that distinction from your vantage point at Michigan... well, that rather proves it, does it not?
Indian-American who attended a T10 in the 1990s on financial aid. I (sadly) agree with it all. My own Wall Street career is entirely due to the network and the expected trajectory.
My own kids are at T10 as well. Doors already opened for them in ways they are not for peers at Wisconsin, Pitt, Colorado, Maryland, UNC. No fighting to get prestigious internships, no gunning for clubs (you realize they don’t matter as much at elite schools). Just deciding on a career path and off you go.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I am not a troll. I’m the parent of a HS sophomore who is killing themselves excelling in school and participating in extracurriculars to be competitive for T20.
At the same time, I see parents on here posting how their kid went to Cornell and ended up in the same place as someone who went to Pitt or another similarly ranked school.
At the same time, in my job I work alongside people who have gone to ivies and schools I’ve never heard of. I went to Michigan, btw.
My sister did her undergraduate at Oxford, stayed in the UK and is now partner at a well respected consulting firm alongside other partners that went to no name schools from India.
So seeing the stress my kid goes through, I am honestly asking what is the point of a Yale or Princeton if they take you to the same place that a school like Rutgers and Radford can take you?!
Ah, the perennial 'does it really matter?' question from those comfortably outside the velvet rope. Let me illuminate the distinction you are evidently missing.
Your anecdotes about colleagues ending up in the same building or your sister at Oxford alongside Indian partners prove precisely nothing beyond basic competence. Of course raw talent exists everywhere. Pitt, Radford, no name schools in India. The point is not whether someone can succeed; it is how they succeed, where they start, and the effortless glide path provided.
Yale or Princeton are not merely schools; they are global keys to locked doors. They provide:
1. An instant, unassailable brand worldwide. A resume that bypasses HR algorithms and lands directly on the desks of people you will never meet. No explaining required. Ever.
2. A network that is the establishment. Your Michigan peers are fine. My classmates run the firms, funds, and faculties your peers aspire to join. This network is not LinkedIn connections; it is lifetime access to decision makers who answer calls because of the crest on the degree.
3. A concentration of ambition and resources. Your sophomore is stressed? Good. They are competing in the Olympics, not the county fair. At Rutgers, they might be the smartest in the room. At Princeton? They are sitting alongside future Nobel laureates, Fortune 500 CEOs, and Senators. The expectations, the peers, the opportunities, it is simply a different universe of potential.
Does a Pitt grad eventually land a good job? Possibly. Does the Princeton grad walk into McKinsey, Goldman as a baseline expectation? Routinely. The 'same place' you naively observe is often just the starting line for the elite grad, while it is the finish line for others. The trajectory, the ceiling, the sheer ease of ascent, that is what you are paying for. And what your child is striving for.
The 'point' is securing a position where merit is assumed, doors open silently, and the path to the top is not a grueling climb, but a well lit escalator.
If you cannot perceive that distinction from your vantage point at Michigan... well, that rather proves it, does it not?
Indian-American who attended a T10 in the 1990s on financial aid. I (sadly) agree with it all. My own Wall Street career is entirely due to the network and the expected trajectory.
My own kids are at T10 as well. Doors already opened for them in ways they are not for peers at Wisconsin, Pitt, Colorado, Maryland, UNC. No fighting to get prestigious internships, no gunning for clubs (you realize they don’t matter as much at elite schools). Just deciding on a career path and off you go.
Meh. I’ve had plenty of yoga instructors who were Ivy League grads.
Yep. Its usually women who no longer need to work. Used to work at Bain or GS, and got married (sometimes to a co-worker) and one spouse's career fast-forwarded. They other mommy-tracked bc someone needs to be around.
Now, kids are headed to college and mom becomes a yoga instructor.
This is extraordinarily common.
Sure. Or, you know, grad school just kind of fizzled out and their parents love having them home again etc etc