Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Brown, since at least half of the student body there has parents who work for hedge funds and investment banks.
and where do you get that data?
Kid goes there. It is common knowledge. Obviously, there will never be an official “database” of where parents work/profession, but this statement about representation in hedge fund, private equity, IB is absolutely true. Yes, it is NYC centric. Having said that, students are impressive in their own right. Econ/CS and Econ/Applied Math are two concentrations that are popular and tends to feed this pipeline to Wall Street. Chicago is also a great school, but very different.
No where near half the students are from the New York area and for those that are, I doubt all (or even half) have a hedge fund parent. How would your child even begin to know this, since at best he only knows the occupations of his friends' parents?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Brown, since at least half of the student body there has parents who work for hedge funds and investment banks.
and where do you get that data?
Kid goes there. It is common knowledge. Obviously, there will never be an official “database” of where parents work/profession, but this statement about representation in hedge fund, private equity, IB is absolutely true. Yes, it is NYC centric. Having said that, students are impressive in their own right. Econ/CS and Econ/Applied Math are two concentrations that are popular and tends to feed this pipeline to Wall Street. Chicago is also a great school, but very different.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Brown, since at least half of the student body there has parents who work for hedge funds and investment banks.
and where do you get that data?
Anonymous wrote:Brown, since at least half of the student body there has parents who work for hedge funds and investment banks.
Anonymous wrote:Finance == Chicago. Brown does have a a B school and its economics/business offerings are especially weak in finance. Chicago undergrad training in finance (for the interested kid) is at a completely different level. If DC is keen on going to Ivy/Brown/East Coast, spend money on an MBA and go to Chicago a few years down the road.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Which would you pick for someone who wants to work in finance in nyc post graduation?
Neither. I would pick Dartmouth.
Anonymous wrote:Very different schools. I'd personally pick Chicago, especially considering interest in finance. But the schools are so different this really depends on the kid.