Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
Eh. I went to Michigan and plenty of kids oooked down on Michigan State kids who looked down on Western Michigan kids who looked down on Wayne State kids who looked down on community college kids. People just suck.
Georgetown kids certainly look down on George Washington kids. My husband went to Harvard and mocks the 'lesser' Ivies. He considers Cornell-Northwestern-Duke safeties.
I hope your kids can live up to that. It sounds like unless they went to/go to Harvard he will think less of them.
No. He understands 5% acceptance rates at HYPS makes those colleges pretty impossible these days.
if he's a H grad that can't get the development tag place on his kids future applications to Harvard, then you should call your DH a 'loser'.
Anonymous wrote:In reference to the rat race, the fixation with elite colleges, all hoop jumping, all the tutoring, etc. For a moment I was speechless. In the end I just told her, "You'll regret it if you don't push yourself." What is the point?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
Eh. I went to Michigan and plenty of kids oooked down on Michigan State kids who looked down on Western Michigan kids who looked down on Wayne State kids who looked down on community college kids. People just suck.
Georgetown kids certainly look down on George Washington kids. My husband went to Harvard and mocks the 'lesser' Ivies. He considers Cornell-Northwestern-Duke safeties.
I hope your kids can live up to that. It sounds like unless they went to/go to Harvard he will think less of them.
No. He understands 5% acceptance rates at HYPS makes those colleges pretty impossible these days.
if he's a H grad that can't get the development tag place on his kids future applications to Harvard, then you should call your DH a 'loser'.
Anonymous wrote:What's the point?
Avoiding regret.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
Eh. I went to Michigan and plenty of kids oooked down on Michigan State kids who looked down on Western Michigan kids who looked down on Wayne State kids who looked down on community college kids. People just suck.
Georgetown kids certainly look down on George Washington kids. My husband went to Harvard and mocks the 'lesser' Ivies. He considers Cornell-Northwestern-Duke safeties.
I hope your kids can live up to that. It sounds like unless they went to/go to Harvard he will think less of them.
No. He understands 5% acceptance rates at HYPS makes those colleges pretty impossible these days.
Anonymous wrote:Do you work, OP?
I've noticed a lot of girls and young adult women with perpetual stay at home moms lack direction. Why study hard when you want to play tennis all morning?
Any pop in the data is likely because smart kids are smart enough and driven enough and responsible enough to go seek help, versus dummies who lack maturity and probably don't comprehend how a health professional can help them work through and overcome the issues they're experiencing.[/quote]
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
And if students who go to top schools do get this and are fine with it, I don't want my kids anywhere near them.
Yeah, nobody wants their kid to marry a rich sophisticated and ambitious spouse.![]()
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP - not everyone is cut out intellectually and personality-wise for the top ticket. Your DD sounds like someone who simply is not cut out for the elite schools. She'll be happier and will do fine, as others have said, at "Average State U". Not everyone is meant for top tier.
How on earth do you come to this conclusion based on the OP?
This whole thread, much like the Brown/Michigan thread, shows a really ugly side of elite college grads. I went to an elite college and grad school and knew my share of neurotic bitches, but it seems like things have really deteriorated since my day. It's sad that people feel this way, and worse that they are willing to say cruel things about 17-22 year old students. How would you feel if you were the OPs daughter coming across this thread. Or a Michigan student, or a Brown student.
Michigan or Brown or UMD students are smart enough to look around at their friends that graduated from "elite" schools and say, thank god I didn't do that. The people that don't understand that nobody wants to be around "elite" grad are elite grads, low EQ/binders/etc. They think it is of their choosing.
Just went to a wedding, groom (B-level state U) bride (elite U)... OMG, it 's like we had to keep the elite grads away from the rest of the wedding. I was embarrassed for the bride, but I have live in CC so it is nothing new to me. Drinking scotch by the bottle and being misogynistic, not impressive.
Anonymous wrote:Has she ever had a job, OP? If she had, she might "get it." I worked at CVS weekends, school breaks and summers starting at age 15 and also as a camp counselor during the summers. Years of minimum wage jobs before college let me know that I wanted to go to college and why.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What's the point?
To secure a high-status job in a top tier city, a quality social circle, and a smart & rich spouse who you can produce bright offspring with.
So that in 30 years she can log on to DCUM and secretly complain about her loveless marriage and messed-up kids and then put other people down to try and feel better about herself.
Yeah, because poor state school schmucks never have domestic violence issues, economic concerns, divorce, bitch about their kid's public schools, etc.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What's the point?
To secure a high-status job in a top tier city, a quality social circle, and a smart & rich spouse who you can produce bright offspring with.
So that in 30 years she can log on to DCUM and secretly complain about her loveless marriage and messed-up kids and then put other people down to try and feel better about herself.