Anonymous wrote:Well better colleges used to have better students. Now I don’t believe it any more. Too many athletes, legacy, and social projects at top colleges. I have confidence only in a few colleges like MIT like Carnegie Mellon.
Anonymous wrote:This whole thread is simply so out of touch with reality. Most people don’t care. I don’t care. I’ve worked with people from ivies and I’ve worked with people from unimpressive party schools. Their educational background has almost no correlation with how good of a coworker (or, in general, how good of an employee) they are.
Do people really feel the way OP does? Caring that much about pedigree just sounds exhausting.
Anonymous wrote:Where are these students supposed to go? There is a huge variety in where students decide to pursue higher education for lots is reasons. But top students with many academic gifts would overall gravitate to a challenging environment where they can make use of their talents.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Okay but why should I, as an employer, GAF who is the best student? I don’t have any jobs for studying and taking tests. I need to know who is the best project manager and best salesperson and best communicator. Mind you, I do think student quality has some overlap with the skills I’m looking for, but you’re the one talking about the “best students.”
I find the obsession over where a person spends 4 years of their life really odd. Especially in the DMV, people seem to take more about predictors of success than actual… success.
And before you accuse me of being a naive populist, I went to Northwestern.
+1. I went to an "elite" college and a top 15 law school, but I mostly haven't worked with people with educational pedigrees like that. I've worked with people with two degrees from Liberty and people with law degrees from UDC and the University of Baltimore who were just as good as their jobs as I am at mine. Now, if my boss asked us to take the SAT, I'd smoke 'em, but that's never come up.
Anonymous wrote:Because of people like Olivia Jade, Lori Loughlin's crap kid. Or my friends kid who had a 2.0 GPA and got into a "public ivy" because daddy knew someone.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:A bad student was 6 APs and a B average? SMH You obsessed people are sick and need professional help. I am so sorry for your kids.
I said 6 AP units, not 6 APs. I graduated high school with one AP class and got 6 units of college credit for it.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Okay but why should I, as an employer, GAF who is the best student? I don’t have any jobs for studying and taking tests. I need to know who is the best project manager and best salesperson and best communicator. Mind you, I do think student quality has some overlap with the skills I’m looking for, but you’re the one talking about the “best students.”
I find the obsession over where a person spends 4 years of their life really odd. Especially in the DMV, people seem to take more about predictors of success than actual… success.
And before you accuse me of being a naive populist, I went to Northwestern.
The easiest way for you, as an employer, to determine who is the best manager / salesperson / communicator would be to administer some type of IQ or aptitude test to job applicants. But you're not allowed to do that thanks to Griggs v. Duke Power Co., 401 U.S. 424 (1971). Therefore, you, like all employers, are forced to use proxies to achieve the same effect. The leading proxy for ability to do the job is, of course, "what degree do you have and where did you get it from". That may not be optimal from an employer's perspective but here we are.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Okay but why should I, as an employer, GAF who is the best student? I don’t have any jobs for studying and taking tests. I need to know who is the best project manager and best salesperson and best communicator. Mind you, I do think student quality has some overlap with the skills I’m looking for, but you’re the one talking about the “best students.”
I find the obsession over where a person spends 4 years of their life really odd. Especially in the DMV, people seem to take more about predictors of success than actual… success.
And before you accuse me of being a naive populist, I went to Northwestern.
The easiest way for you, as an employer, to determine who is the best manager / salesperson / communicator would be to administer some type of IQ or aptitude test to job applicants. But you're not allowed to do that thanks to Griggs v. Duke Power Co., 401 U.S. 424 (1971). Therefore, you, like all employers, are forced to use proxies to achieve the same effect. The leading proxy for ability to do the job is, of course, "what degree do you have and where did you get it from". That may not be optimal from an employer's perspective but here we are.
Anonymous wrote:Okay but why should I, as an employer, GAF who is the best student? I don’t have any jobs for studying and taking tests. I need to know who is the best project manager and best salesperson and best communicator. Mind you, I do think student quality has some overlap with the skills I’m looking for, but you’re the one talking about the “best students.”
I find the obsession over where a person spends 4 years of their life really odd. Especially in the DMV, people seem to take more about predictors of success than actual… success.
And before you accuse me of being a naive populist, I went to Northwestern.