Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It depends on the profession.
In law, law school attended is a good proxy for intelligence (not necessarily competence, etc.), because the primary factor in admissions is the LSAT, an extremely hard standardized test.
What about all the prestigious schools that went test optional the past 5 years?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It depends on the profession.
In law, law school attended is a good proxy for intelligence (not necessarily competence, etc.), because the primary factor in admissions is the LSAT, an extremely hard standardized test.
IDK . . . there are a lot of people who choose law school (and other graduate programs) based on a location that works for where they are in their lives.
Anonymous wrote:It depends on the profession.
In law, law school attended is a good proxy for intelligence (not necessarily competence, etc.), because the primary factor in admissions is the LSAT, an extremely hard standardized test.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:In accounting, as long as the school is accredited it really doesn’t matter. Most people who I work with went to state schools, Florida, Maryland, VT, JMU, Georgia
Ever notice that the Elijah Watt Sells award winners (highest CPA exam scores) are often from no-name schools. Accounting is one if the most egalitarian professions out there. Any finance bro field is a different story. They look for rich kids schools (BC, Richmond, etc.).
Because accounting is "technical" know how, whereas finance bro fields are all about schmoozing and who you know.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:In accounting, as long as the school is accredited it really doesn’t matter. Most people who I work with went to state schools, Florida, Maryland, VT, JMU, Georgia
Ever notice that the Elijah Watt Sells award winners (highest CPA exam scores) are often from no-name schools. Accounting is one if the most egalitarian professions out there. Any finance bro field is a different story. They look for rich kids schools (BC, Richmond, etc.).
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:In tech...it does not matter at all. They are looking for skills and they will also do a lot of testing and tests and watch your body language etc before hiring you.
The pipeline is certainly the internships for the first job.
Which is annoying. My 19/20 year old has been getting all sorts of very lucrative engineering internships at various Fortune 500 companies. But not in their particular passion, which in fairness, is extremely competitive. Pretty much the most competitive field there is for engineers.
Do you just settle for the junior year internships and the offers that comes with it?
They are 20/21 at this point.
It seems far too young to give up on bigger dreams.
Well aware that there are worse problems to have. But this junior year internship pipeline seems nuts at this age point. Do you not get a chance to apply when you graduate?
Hilarious that you and they think you start in your dream job. wtf
Anonymous wrote:In accounting, as long as the school is accredited it really doesn’t matter. Most people who I work with went to state schools, Florida, Maryland, VT, JMU, Georgia
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:for established professionals it's less about absolute ranking or desirability and more about degree mill vs not.
degree mill helps check the box if a degree is mandatory for a position; but it definitely doesn't add to a resume, and can sometimes be a hurdle to overcome.
for fresh grads, a lot of recruitment happens at the college itself; there are definitely opportunity pipelines that exist at the more prestigious programs that are not available to the bulk of recent grads.
I know what you mean, and I’ve seen some great people in that first category, but otherwise the majority are people I’d pass over. I tend to have a serious dose of skepticism for the established professional+diploma mill.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:In tech...it does not matter at all. They are looking for skills and they will also do a lot of testing and tests and watch your body language etc before hiring you.
The pipeline is certainly the internships for the first job.
Which is annoying. My 19/20 year old has been getting all sorts of very lucrative engineering internships at various Fortune 500 companies. But not in their particular passion, which in fairness, is extremely competitive. Pretty much the most competitive field there is for engineers.
Do you just settle for the junior year internships and the offers that comes with it?
They are 20/21 at this point.
It seems far too young to give up on bigger dreams.
Well aware that there are worse problems to have. But this junior year internship pipeline seems nuts at this age point. Do you not get a chance to apply when you graduate?
Anonymous wrote:In tech...it does not matter at all. They are looking for skills and they will also do a lot of testing and tests and watch your body language etc before hiring you.
The pipeline is certainly the internships for the first job.