Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I live in the philly area and there are tons of penn state alumni in my neighborhood. None of them seem bothered by it at all.
Too dumb to care.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I live in the philly area and there are tons of penn state alumni in my neighborhood. None of them seem bothered by it at all.
Too dumb to care.
lol, so true. State school people rarely if ever venture out of state school bubbles. Everyone they know is of average intelligence. Overconfidence and lack of self-awareness thrives in state school bubbles.
Anonymous wrote:No. The football scandal was a long time ago and all grad schools and almost all hiring managers realize that a regular student has zero to do with football operations. Sure every once in a while you'll get a dick-ish hiring manager making comments about it but 99% of people realize that the sophomore in business or engineering has no control over the oversight/lack of oversight in the football coaching area.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This forum cracks me up, seriously?? There are some really bitter folks out there! I am a Pennsylvania native and PSU alum. There may be some residual stigma, however, most people have realized that the scandal had nothing to do with the students. I have never had an issue professionally prior to or following the scandal.
+1
Get your heads out of your asses. What about schools with mass shootings, like Va Tech? Do you think there's a stigma there? Come on.
I'm a grad and so is my spouse. We've done very well professionally as have some of my friends from there. I won't say everyone who graduated is a success because of course that cannot be said about any school.
But a stigma? Hell no.
You've fallen down the DCUM rabbit hole.
Sorry, dude, that's a really lame analogy and it makes me question the value of your degree. Obviously, unlike Penn St. (and seemingly most of its students and alumni), Va. Tech didn't blindly shield and defend an athletic program that supported a monster pedophile. No one blames Va. Tech. for the tragedy and its aftermath. The Penn St. stigma is deserved.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This forum cracks me up, seriously?? There are some really bitter folks out there! I am a Pennsylvania native and PSU alum. There may be some residual stigma, however, most people have realized that the scandal had nothing to do with the students. I have never had an issue professionally prior to or following the scandal.
+1
Get your heads out of your asses. What about schools with mass shootings, like Va Tech? Do you think there's a stigma there? Come on.
I'm a grad and so is my spouse. We've done very well professionally as have some of my friends from there. I won't say everyone who graduated is a success because of course that cannot be said about any school.
But a stigma? Hell no.
You've fallen down the DCUM rabbit hole.
Anonymous wrote:Prett much screams, hey, I couldn't get in anywhere better.
Anonymous wrote:I agree with the PPs that PSU students both shouldn't and are unlikely be to tainted by the situation with Sandusky/Paterno.
I DO think, however, that the tragedy reflected some larger truths about Penn State: the idolatry of football, the lack of ethics and critical thinking skills among the students (the cheering and near-rioting for JoPa during the scandal was appalling), and a calcified bureaucracy that prioritizes athletics and $$$ over education and student/community safety. Is it all that different from other big state football/party schools? I don't know, but I won't encourage my high school junior to apply there. It would disgust me to give them my hard-earned money.
--PSU grad, with 5 others in my immediate family and more than a dozen in my extended family
(FWIW, yes, most of us are at least moderately successful in our careers. About half of us were excellent students going in, but couldn't afford to go elsewhere. The rest of us were mediocre high school and/or college students who have nonetheless done pretty well.)
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I live in the philly area and there are tons of penn state alumni in my neighborhood. None of them seem bothered by it at all.
Too dumb to care.