Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:I think its a great article. I went to an Ivy back in the day and from looking at them with DC and going back, I can tell you things have changed enormously. Now it seems everyone wants to go into finance or Wall St. I maybe knew one or two people like that. Instead we had future academics, journalists, public interest advocates, writers. Where are those students now? At SLACs, where they are immersed in the world of ideas and not the world of pre-professionalism.
My sister just graduated from swat (which is historically much less 'preprofessional' than NESCAC slacs that DCUM's love - and she said that even within the four years she was there, each incoming class became more and more pre-professional.
McKinsey came on campus for info session and packed the room supposedly - the number 1 question she was asked by freshman this past year was regarding how to gain relevant internships asap to position oneself for future recruiting from 'top firms'.
My sister doesn't even want her 6 figure silicon valley job (she wants to be an urban farmer) but within her circle at swat, kids are leaving for 6 figure jobs in tech firms or finance/wallstreet, or top strategy consulting.
Yes, you have your med school and ph.d kids (which still occurs at a higher percentage at swat than other places) but even SLAC's are becoming more and more preprofessional.
I was the PP that talked about the draw of the ivies being 'access' and not the actual education. SLAC's are turning into the same way.
As I said, it isn't a school issue - it is a societal issue. Values, Competition, tougher to maintain standards of living or rise in 'economic class' cause students to act this way.