Anonymous wrote:people come in their 40s and decide (once it's apparent their kids can't get into the same schools they did), "those schools are so OVER"
meanwhile, those grads are more diverse than ever, more on FA, less privileged, have more work experience coming into college than a generation before, and (pre this TO blip) scored higher on every metric.
plenty of us thought the Yalies (etc) from the class of 1995 were arrogant blowhards. but these kids? I'd take them every day over the previous model of an Ivy League grad
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:YOUR kids should go to community college then state school or better yet trade school…
My kids? Oh, they are at elite SLACs, Ivies, Georgetown, or UVA at worst.
Yawn. No one asked you to come in and act high and mighty. No one cares about your kids but you.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Double Ivy grad. Hiring manager at major consulting firm. Agree with everything Silver said. Everything is spot on.
It's not the 1990s any more. Most parents with kids heading to college won't realize how much higher education has changed since their days, especially at elite schools. Even if the name of the classes look familiar, how those classes are taught is hugely different now and far more ideologically slanted.
Our best associates and analyst these days are from major state schools but there's also a place for the good and solid LACs too, so don't lose hope.
BigLaw hiring says otherwise.
https://lawschooli.com/best-law-schools-for-biglaw/
If you'd bothered reading Silver's article, you'd notice he made a special exemption for BIGLAW.
But BIGLAW also isn't immune from these changes. There's been controversy aplenty in elite law schools that caused concern at BIGLAW firms. Some offers were rescinded last fall.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I’m confused by folks calling some Ivy League grads as coddled? Coddled by whom?
by the school. Some elite schools treat their kids as "too big to fail", and don't want to impact their student body average GPA, so they let them withdraw up to the lat week before finals, whereas in big state schools, you can't withdraw that close to finals, and you just take the F or D or whatever, and make it up in the summer. And big state schools don't hold your hand and treat you like you're "special".
You can't withdraw close to finals at Ivies either.
This thread reads like a lot of sour grapes.
Many schools (not just Ivies) care about a diverse student body. The poster who referenced "DEI " admissions as if diversity is bad, clearly has an axe to grind and doesn't understand higher ed.
I don't buy the "double Ivy" poster either. Sure, dude.
Not sure the need for attacks. Lots of great schools out there. Go with what resonates with you and where you can get in. My kid is at an Ivy for its great teaching, resources, community, opportunities and financial aid. It's been a fantastic educational experience so far.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Double Ivy grad. Hiring manager at major consulting firm. Agree with everything Silver said. Everything is spot on.
It's not the 1990s any more. Most parents with kids heading to college won't realize how much higher education has changed since their days, especially at elite schools. Even if the name of the classes look familiar, how those classes are taught is hugely different now and far more ideologically slanted.
Our best associates and analyst these days are from major state schools but there's also a place for the good and solid LACs too, so don't lose hope.
BigLaw hiring says otherwise.
https://lawschooli.com/best-law-schools-for-biglaw/
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I’m confused by folks calling some Ivy League grads as coddled? Coddled by whom?
by the school. Some elite schools treat their kids as "too big to fail", and don't want to impact their student body average GPA, so they let them withdraw up to the lat week before finals, whereas in big state schools, you can't withdraw that close to finals, and you just take the F or D or whatever, and make it up in the summer. And big state schools don't hold your hand and treat you like you're "special".
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:More reasons your kids should go your neighborhood public HS. It’s free and will get your kids same state colleges.
You're assuming that the "neighborhood public HS" will prepare your kids equally well to get top grades, once they're attending the state colleges.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Double Ivy grad. Hiring manager at major consulting firm. Agree with everything Silver said. Everything is spot on.
It's not the 1990s any more. Most parents with kids heading to college won't realize how much higher education has changed since their days, especially at elite schools. Even if the name of the classes look familiar, how those classes are taught is hugely different now and far more ideologically slanted.
Our best associates and analyst these days are from major state schools but there's also a place for the good and solid LACs too, so don't lose hope.
BigLaw hiring says otherwise.
https://lawschooli.com/best-law-schools-for-biglaw/
Anonymous wrote:https://www.natesilver.net/p/go-to-a-state-school
I don't always agree with Nate Silver but I think he is spot on. I have interviewed several Ivy League grads that came across as entitled and coddled. I have to wonder if other hiring managers are seeing a similar trend.
Anonymous wrote:More reasons your kids should go your neighborhood public HS. It’s free and will get your kids same state colleges.
Anonymous wrote:Double Ivy grad. Hiring manager at major consulting firm. Agree with everything Silver said. Everything is spot on.
It's not the 1990s any more. Most parents with kids heading to college won't realize how much higher education has changed since their days, especially at elite schools. Even if the name of the classes look familiar, how those classes are taught is hugely different now and far more ideologically slanted.
Our best associates and analyst these days are from major state schools but there's also a place for the good and solid LACs too, so don't lose hope.