Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Wow. I really do not understand the obsession with Ivy League schools. You should be focused on what school is best for your child's area of interest, not some arbitrary athletic conference. My kid, for example, was interested in engineering. I am also an engineer and know what the different schools have to offer. With the exception of Cornell, it would have been mind bogglingly stupid to focus on Ivy League schools because engineering is not their strong suit. Outside of Caltech/MIT/Stanford, the most sought after engineers, at least at my company, come from places like Purdue and U of Illinois. Certainly not Harvard and Yale.
Princeton, Brown and Northwestern have legit engineering departments. You ever been to Purdue? Maybe your son can marry some hillbilly girl. And Illinois? Maybe he can marry a Chinese international girl who can't speak English.
So, if you don't go to an Ivy you are a hillbilly? Are you drunk?
Everyone knows that all 6.597 million Indiana residents and all 40,000 at Purdue are hillbillies. Do I really need to spell it out for you?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Harvard undergrad is weird-- there are definitely benefits to being on a wealthy campus with bright students but much of the teaching is done by grad students not research professors. Biggest thing you get out of it is a name and a sense of entitlement.
I went there and this is totally untrue. Maybe in the past, but not in the last 10 years.
Almost all of the instruction I got was from actual tenure-track professors.
I went there too and disagree with you. Maybe it depends on major.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Harvard undergrad is weird-- there are definitely benefits to being on a wealthy campus with bright students but much of the teaching is done by grad students not research professors. Biggest thing you get out of it is a name and a sense of entitlement.
Bingo
So do you two know this because you are entitled a-holes who got nothing but a brand name out of your Harvard education? Or are you opining about an experience you haven't had?