Anonymous wrote:Reminiscing is an effort to reassure our kids (and ourselves) that most of us did just fine without pre-professional student clubs. That being said, it is 2025 and I’m also interested to hear about how kids are navigating the pressures of the student club scene on campus today.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I attended a WASP 30 years ago and don’t remember preprofessional clubs being a thing- not even amongst the students who were set on investment banking, finance, etc.
Because it wasn’t in 1995.
But that’s historical information. OP and the rest of us are looking for current information.
(BTW, my memories are consistent with yours, PP. Not WASP, but a pre-professional-heavy T10. It might be fun to start a different thread to reflect and reminisce about the 90s.)
Anonymous wrote:I attended a WASP 30 years ago and don’t remember preprofessional clubs being a thing- not even amongst the students who were set on investment banking, finance, etc.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My kid is at an Ivy. Straight As, lots of friend, club sport, club and so much more relaxed than HS. He was at a private HS.
He loves that everyone in his classes are really smart—that is what he said. Lots of lovely discussions. His friends are all really funny- witty.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I think this is a big appeal of the Yale/Rice residential college system. the biggest "club" you'll be in is assigned randomly before you even set foot on campus
Notre Dame too, I like the model
Anonymous wrote:I think this is a big appeal of the Yale/Rice residential college system. the biggest "club" you'll be in is assigned randomly before you even set foot on campus
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This has changed significantly since my time there, but yeah clubs at the school I went to are so competitive now and pre-professional, like tryouts to be part of the consulting club, or the investment club. In my day, the clubs were pretty relaxed and nobody cared about pre-professional clubs.
Freshmen are also WAY more intense because the recruiting cycle for jobs starts in your sophomore year fall.
Can you help me understand this? The recruiting for jobs start sophomore year? So, if a student falls short in that process, what does that mean? They never have a chance at a good job?
Sorry I’m so obtuse, I’m new to this mindset.
Anonymous wrote:This has changed significantly since my time there, but yeah clubs at the school I went to are so competitive now and pre-professional, like tryouts to be part of the consulting club, or the investment club. In my day, the clubs were pretty relaxed and nobody cared about pre-professional clubs.
Freshmen are also WAY more intense because the recruiting cycle for jobs starts in your sophomore year fall.
Anonymous wrote:I always hear that the tough part is getting in and then it's easy. That doesn't seem to be the case for DD. She's at a T5 and the environment is intense. Getting in was step one, then it's the competition for the clubs etc. She has a good group of friends and is doing well but the pressure doesn't let up. Is this the case for all T5-10/20s because colleges are so preprofessional now? My friend's daughter went to Tufts and it was the same. She had a miserable college experience because she was always competing for the next internship. She landed a dream job post-graduation but paid the price during college.
Anonymous wrote:This has changed significantly since my time there, but yeah clubs at the school I went to are so competitive now and pre-professional, like tryouts to be part of the consulting club, or the investment club. In my day, the clubs were pretty relaxed and nobody cared about pre-professional clubs.
Freshmen are also WAY more intense because the recruiting cycle for jobs starts in your sophomore year fall.