Anonymous wrote:I was struck by her lack of self awareness and the blame she seemed to attach to her parents. It was a weird piece.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Tenure is a pay bump, prob about $7-10k at Nebraska, so she's going to make approx. $85k this year. Nearing six figures before factoring in perks in ultra low cost flyover country.
Yeah but who wants to live in Lincoln Nebraska????
Judging by population statistics, not many.
Lincoln Nebraska has been rated in the top ten best college towns. She could do way worse than that.
Anonymous wrote:She could go get some crummy non-tenured teaching gig in Miami tomorrow. She doesn't want the sun, she wants a multi-million dollar tacky mansion. She's in Nebraska for the $ and prestige of a tenure gig.
Anonymous wrote:English is not an easy major. I know that it has a reputation for being easy peasy but that is not the reality at all.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I did product management and corporate development. English majors were my best hires. Critical thinking and writing skills = gold.
That’s more so because most ivy English majors by and large come from UMC families and elite high schools.
Strivers from first gen look for more readily employeable like engineering or medicine
The ones I hired weren't from UMC. They just really liked studying English. Their biggest issue is finding hiring managers willing to give it a try. Admittedly my 1st hire was because I got tired of interviewing and rejecting brown nosers that HR kept sending and I just liked her. Never looked back.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I did product management and corporate development. English majors were my best hires. Critical thinking and writing skills = gold.
That’s more so because most ivy English majors by and large come from UMC families and elite high schools.
Strivers from first gen look for more readily employeable like engineering or medicine
Anonymous wrote:I did product management and corporate development. English majors were my best hires. Critical thinking and writing skills = gold.
Anonymous wrote:I did product management and corporate development. English majors were my best hires. Critical thinking and writing skills = gold.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I have a Latina friend who got in to Cornell 30 years ago. Apparently Cornell admits tons of people without fully funding them. She couldn't afford Cornell then and had to turn it down for a community college. She's now a loud-mouth low-level govt clerk. Yeah, the one you saw at DMV. After seeing her in action, I realized Cornell isn't all that. It's a school that takes in a CC-level student for stats purpose.
Perhaps you'd like to explain what being a Latina has to do with anything else that your wrote?
urm