Anonymous wrote:No. I do take it as a sign that person almost always came from a family with parents who received a high level of education themselves, which also suggests there was some level of family money a generation or two ago. I didn’t really understand this until I started working in tech with really smart people from rural towns and who went to mid-ranked state schools and who so clearly could have gone to Stanford etc if they’d come from educated, affluent families — and public school systems where sending these kids to T20 was the norm.
Anonymous wrote:Is this signaling still valid today, if it ever was to employers, future life partners etc, or has it been severely diluted because of how these elite colleges admit their undergraduate classes today
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The answer is “no,” but 99 percent of posters want it to be “yes.”
+1
As a hiring manager, I didn’t look much at schools. I didn’t even pay attention to the “elite 20” or know what all of them were. The upper management wanted to hire people with MBAs from Ivies. Really nuts bc the people we served were not the upper crust and having the MBA would be marginally useful in 2-5 jobs there.
I looked for results on resumes more than whatever school was attended. As an employee, I focused on results. I always was able to get good jobs without a top 10 school.
Did the upper management cared about the name of undergrad college if you have an MBA from brand name college?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The answer is “no,” but 99 percent of posters want it to be “yes.”
+1
As a hiring manager, I didn’t look much at schools. I didn’t even pay attention to the “elite 20” or know what all of them were. The upper management wanted to hire people with MBAs from Ivies. Really nuts bc the people we served were not the upper crust and having the MBA would be marginally useful in 2-5 jobs there.
I looked for results on resumes more than whatever school was attended. As an employee, I focused on results. I always was able to get good jobs without a top 10 school.
Did the upper management cared about the name of undergrad college if you have an MBA from brand name college?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The answer is “no,” but 99 percent of posters want it to be “yes.”
+1
As a hiring manager, I didn’t look much at schools. I didn’t even pay attention to the “elite 20” or know what all of them were. The upper management wanted to hire people with MBAs from Ivies. Really nuts bc the people we served were not the upper crust and having the MBA would be marginally useful in 2-5 jobs there.
I looked for results on resumes more than whatever school was attended. As an employee, I focused on results. I always was able to get good jobs without a top 10 school.
Anonymous wrote:The answer is “no,” but 99 percent of posters want it to be “yes.”
Anonymous wrote:Not for all of them, but I think there are schools that signify this. U of Chicago, CMU, Cal Tech, for instance.