Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Biggest benefit is that I am able to work it into any conversation by the second or third sentence. I love the look on people's faces! Maybe I did go to UMass-Amherst but Chip is at Harvard, Karen. Suck it.
I think you meant "Chip is at a school in Boston."
Anonymous wrote:All of the Ivies are great, but I think only Harvard, Yale, Princeton and Wharton are really differentiated and worthy of premium over a great state flagship.
For example, the merits of paying full tuition for Penn, Brown, Dartmouth or Cornell over in-state UVA is very ambiguous.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My son has been accepted to a couple Ivy League schools and I just wanted to hear opinions from others, what are some of the benefits of an Ivy over another top 50 school?
Parents can display the sticker on the back of their car and feel that they are better than those around them. 😉
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Which Ivy League schools, which majors, and which other schools?Anonymous wrote:I don't think this is a legit post. Why? Because you're a day before your kid needs to commit. But I will say I know 5 different kids from 5 different schools (3 diff states) who are turning down ivy leagues for other schools because their major is stronger elsewhere.
The benefits of an Ivy League education is the school and major don't matter that much.
Anonymous wrote:My son has been accepted to a couple Ivy League schools and I just wanted to hear opinions from others, what are some of the benefits of an Ivy over another top 50 school?
Anonymous wrote:There is no "instant credibility for life" as stated by another poster for most Ivy league schools.
Princeton and U Penn-Wharton along with Harvard arguably provide the most assumed credibility.
But when one shares that he/she is a graduate of Brown, Penn (non-Wharton grads), Cornell, Dartmouth, Columbia, or Yale, thoughts other than credibility come to mind.
Broadly speaking, an Ivy League degree suggests that one is smart, hard-working,and ambitious--but, this is true for graduates of northwestern, Chicago, MIT, Stanford, JHU, Duke, WashUStL, Emory, Berkeley, Amherst, Swarthmore, Wellesley, the 3 main service academies, Georgia Tech, CS and engineering majors from many state flagships and many other schools. My assumption is that these non-Ivy grads are just as qualified as any Ivy grad except regarding U Penn-Wharton. I also assume that these non-Ivy grads choose not to pursue any Ivy League education.
Anonymous wrote:Which Ivy League schools, which majors, and which other schools?Anonymous wrote:I don't think this is a legit post. Why? Because you're a day before your kid needs to commit. But I will say I know 5 different kids from 5 different schools (3 diff states) who are turning down ivy leagues for other schools because their major is stronger elsewhere.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My son has been accepted to a couple Ivy League schools and I just wanted to hear opinions from others, what are some of the benefits of an Ivy over another top 50 school?
It really depends what other top 50 schools you're talking about.
No benefit vs. other top 15-20 type schools.
Versus, say UM or UVA?
The Ivy grad will have a certain amount of additional "instant credibility" for life.
That's about it.
That would be if you stop at undergrad and don't gain any other life achievement which is unlikely. Otherwise your graduate degree and what you accomplish will dictate your "credibility in life"...
Which Ivy League schools, which majors, and which other schools?Anonymous wrote:I don't think this is a legit post. Why? Because you're a day before your kid needs to commit. But I will say I know 5 different kids from 5 different schools (3 diff states) who are turning down ivy leagues for other schools because their major is stronger elsewhere.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I don't think this is a legit post. Why? Because you're a day before your kid needs to commit. But I will say I know 5 different kids from 5 different schools (3 diff states) who are turning down ivy leagues for other schools because their major is stronger elsewhere.
You may be telling the truth…but how do you know 5 different kids at all these schools and states and their college decisions?
I only know where my kid’s friends are attending and only after they offered it up…I have no idea what colleges they are turning down.
1. College Roommate freshman year's kid x3 (we were in a quad)
2. One good friend's kid
3. Husband's investment partner's son
I know lots of results from other families, too, as the moms would text me with each acceptance.
Anonymous wrote:Two benefits:
1. more doors open when it comes time to look for a job - unless the folks at Columbia tarnish the reputation of the entire Ivy League.
2. benefit from grade inflation, if you graduate with anything less tan a 3.7 you have done something wrong.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I don't think this is a legit post. Why? Because you're a day before your kid needs to commit. But I will say I know 5 different kids from 5 different schools (3 diff states) who are turning down ivy leagues for other schools because their major is stronger elsewhere.
You may be telling the truth…but how do you know 5 different kids at all these schools and states and their college decisions?
I only know where my kid’s friends are attending and only after they offered it up…I have no idea what colleges they are turning down.
Anonymous wrote:I don't think this is a legit post. Why? Because you're a day before your kid needs to commit. But I will say I know 5 different kids from 5 different schools (3 diff states) who are turning down ivy leagues for other schools because their major is stronger elsewhere.