Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This a dumb discussion. Pursue and gain knowledge and experience that are of value and you can be paid for what you have mastered. If you want to go with the surgeon that skipped the AP or the IB or the Honors or whatever was the toughest class available, go for it.
Perhaps a level of Biology or Chem that was at a pace that allowed a student to grasp the material better and served as encouragement to pursue the subject matter later also matters? Learning is not a zero sum game and it also lacks a linear timeline. If a AP class that was more discouraging because of the volume and pace of the material drove kids away from the subject matter then what was accomplished? Learning should not be about attrition.
Anonymous wrote:This a dumb discussion. Pursue and gain knowledge and experience that are of value and you can be paid for what you have mastered. If you want to go with the surgeon that skipped the AP or the IB or the Honors or whatever was the toughest class available, go for it.
Anonymous wrote:This a dumb discussion. Pursue and gain knowledge and experience that are of value and you can be paid for what you have mastered. If you want to go with the surgeon that skipped the AP or the IB or the Honors or whatever was the toughest class available, go for it.
Anonymous wrote:Indirect correlation.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Top one percent is not good enough. No one wants to pay good money to watch a one in one hundred player.
99.999% of soccer players don't care about professional soccer careers. Most of them just want to use that skill to leverage to get into a good college and a good job after graduation. Where I work, they give out internships to D1/D2/D3 athletes over non-athletes. These internship positions pay $35/hr. The head of HR played soccer at Clemson.
Where I work no one cares if you played soccer. Produce results or the money will go to the other guy who does produce results. Soccer is not going to help you much. But different strokes for different folks.
Did those AP classes make a difference where you work?
If you dont know what you are doing, the money will go to someone who does so you tell me.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Top one percent is not good enough. No one wants to pay good money to watch a one in one hundred player.
99.999% of soccer players don't care about professional soccer careers. Most of them just want to use that skill to leverage to get into a good college and a good job after graduation. Where I work, they give out internships to D1/D2/D3 athletes over non-athletes. These internship positions pay $35/hr. The head of HR played soccer at Clemson.
Where I work no one cares if you played soccer. Produce results or the money will go to the other guy who does produce results. Soccer is not going to help you much. But different strokes for different folks.
Did those AP classes make a difference where you work?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Top one percent is not good enough. No one wants to pay good money to watch a one in one hundred player.
99.999% of soccer players don't care about professional soccer careers. Most of them just want to use that skill to leverage to get into a good college and a good job after graduation. Where I work, they give out internships to D1/D2/D3 athletes over non-athletes. These internship positions pay $35/hr. The head of HR played soccer at Clemson.
Where I work no one cares if you played soccer. Produce results or the money will go to the other guy who does produce results. Soccer is not going to help you much. But different strokes for different folks.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Top one percent is not good enough. No one wants to pay good money to watch a one in one hundred player.
99.999% of soccer players don't care about professional soccer careers. Most of them just want to use that skill to leverage to get into a good college and a good job after graduation. Where I work, they give out internships to D1/D2/D3 athletes over non-athletes. These internship positions pay $35/hr. The head of HR played soccer at Clemson.
Anonymous wrote:Try again,
Boys:
1 in 5,355 high school players will be drafted to the MLS
1 in 447 college players will be drafted in the MLS
Girls:
1 in 10,316 high school players will be drafted to the NWSL
1 in 986 college players will be drafted in the NWSL
If you focus on school instead of soccer, you would be able to calculate those odds as being significantly lower than 1 in 100.
Anonymous wrote:Top one percent is not good enough. No one wants to pay good money to watch a one in one hundred player.