Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:They expect the college admissions process to find the exceptions.
Bingo. If college admissions officers are already doing the front-end vetting for you, why bother reinventing the wheel? As the saying goes, work smarter not harder.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If the so-called elite employers think they're doing well recruiting from a certain set of schools, what incentive do they have to spend more time/money looking elsewhere for (in their mind) marginal value?
None which is why the insanity will continue. The name of the school does not matter for some degrees, and I think most people understand it, but the name on the degree is the only thing that matters for certain professions as much as people insist otherwise. For all of the Barista jokes, who has a better shot at a hedge fund job- a lax player with an english degree from Princeton or someone with a 4.0 in business from Towson?
Trick question. They both have low odds. Hedge funds are hiring the lax player's classmate majoring in something more suitable for the job.
NESAC schools are heavily recruited by wall street, what relevant majors do they offer?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If the so-called elite employers think they're doing well recruiting from a certain set of schools, what incentive do they have to spend more time/money looking elsewhere for (in their mind) marginal value?
None which is why the insanity will continue. The name of the school does not matter for some degrees, and I think most people understand it, but the name on the degree is the only thing that matters for certain professions as much as people insist otherwise. For all of the Barista jokes, who has a better shot at a hedge fund job- a lax player with an english degree from Princeton or someone with a 4.0 in business from Towson?
Trick question. They both have low odds. Hedge funds are hiring the lax player's classmate majoring in something more suitable for the job.
My English major investment banker college-roommate disagrees.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If the so-called elite employers think they're doing well recruiting from a certain set of schools, what incentive do they have to spend more time/money looking elsewhere for (in their mind) marginal value?
None which is why the insanity will continue. The name of the school does not matter for some degrees, and I think most people understand it, but the name on the degree is the only thing that matters for certain professions as much as people insist otherwise. For all of the Barista jokes, who has a better shot at a hedge fund job- a lax player with an english degree from Princeton or someone with a 4.0 in business from Towson?
Exactly. And this is why my senior kid is going to a “lesser Ivy“ instead of a Flagship
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I thought it was good and covered all bases, except one, that I continue to rant about.
Part of the reason there is so much competition for the top schools is because so-called elite employers only recruit from them. We need companies to see that there are tons of bright students everywhere. Just look at the girl profiled in the article who is clearly smart and likely has a ton of grit. She's going to Hunter College where no investment bank or MBB would ever look to hire from. Until that mindset is broken, things will not change.
I feel your post is misguided and idealistic. Maybe you have never been on the recruiting side for a major corporation. There are only so many colleges that a recruiting team can visit. When they go to the school, they want to see dozens, maybe hundreds of potential applicants who are the combination of highly intelligent, socially adept, analytical, communicative and sustained high-performance. They don't want to see just 1 or 2 bc that would be a waste of time and money. Hunter College may have a handful of these kids, but Cornell and NYU have hundreds. Half of Williams' entering class is this profile. The recruitment engine is what it is for elite roles and it won't change for at least another generation.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My Senior is in a major where the school matters—sigh. So we are forking over the $86k/yr over in-state. My sophomore is in my major where it really doesn’t matter- just a solid state school is fine.
The cost of higher education is ridiculous. Everyone should be angry at the industry that escalated prices so high—Fed govt loan industry.
Could you kindly expand on this? For what majors do you think the school doesn't matter?
+1. Not true. Unfortunately.
Education and nursing
Maybe?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If the so-called elite employers think they're doing well recruiting from a certain set of schools, what incentive do they have to spend more time/money looking elsewhere for (in their mind) marginal value?
None which is why the insanity will continue. The name of the school does not matter for some degrees, and I think most people understand it, but the name on the degree is the only thing that matters for certain professions as much as people insist otherwise. For all of the Barista jokes, who has a better shot at a hedge fund job- a lax player with an english degree from Princeton or someone with a 4.0 in business from Towson?
Trick question. They both have low odds. Hedge funds are hiring the lax player's classmate majoring in something more suitable for the job.
My English major investment banker college-roommate disagrees.
Anonymous wrote:The quant will be getting paid way more.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My Senior is in a major where the school matters—sigh. So we are forking over the $86k/yr over in-state. My sophomore is in my major where it really doesn’t matter- just a solid state school is fine.
The cost of higher education is ridiculous. Everyone should be angry at the industry that escalated prices so high—Fed govt loan industry.
Could you kindly expand on this? For what majors do you think the school doesn't matter?
+1. Not true. Unfortunately.
Education and nursing
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If the so-called elite employers think they're doing well recruiting from a certain set of schools, what incentive do they have to spend more time/money looking elsewhere for (in their mind) marginal value?
None which is why the insanity will continue. The name of the school does not matter for some degrees, and I think most people understand it, but the name on the degree is the only thing that matters for certain professions as much as people insist otherwise. For all of the Barista jokes, who has a better shot at a hedge fund job- a lax player with an english degree from Princeton or someone with a 4.0 in business from Towson?
Trick question. They both have low odds. Hedge funds are hiring the lax player's classmate majoring in something more suitable for the job.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My Senior is in a major where the school matters—sigh. So we are forking over the $86k/yr over in-state. My sophomore is in my major where it really doesn’t matter- just a solid state school is fine.
The cost of higher education is ridiculous. Everyone should be angry at the industry that escalated prices so high—Fed govt loan industry.
Could you kindly expand on this? For what majors do you think the school doesn't matter?
+1. Not true. Unfortunately.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If the so-called elite employers think they're doing well recruiting from a certain set of schools, what incentive do they have to spend more time/money looking elsewhere for (in their mind) marginal value?
None which is why the insanity will continue. The name of the school does not matter for some degrees, and I think most people understand it, but the name on the degree is the only thing that matters for certain professions as much as people insist otherwise. For all of the Barista jokes, who has a better shot at a hedge fund job- a lax player with an english degree from Princeton or someone with a 4.0 in business from Towson?
Trick question. They both have low odds. Hedge funds are hiring the lax player's classmate majoring in something more suitable for the job.
They have the people skills. In an increasingly automated world dominated by artificial intelligence, the people skills will always win.
NESAC schools are heavily recruited by wall street, what relevant majors do they offer?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If the so-called elite employers think they're doing well recruiting from a certain set of schools, what incentive do they have to spend more time/money looking elsewhere for (in their mind) marginal value?
None which is why the insanity will continue. The name of the school does not matter for some degrees, and I think most people understand it, but the name on the degree is the only thing that matters for certain professions as much as people insist otherwise. For all of the Barista jokes, who has a better shot at a hedge fund job- a lax player with an english degree from Princeton or someone with a 4.0 in business from Towson?
Anonymous wrote:I thought it was good and covered all bases, except one, that I continue to rant about.
Part of the reason there is so much competition for the top schools is because so-called elite employers only recruit from them. We need companies to see that there are tons of bright students everywhere. Just look at the girl profiled in the article who is clearly smart and likely has a ton of grit. She's going to Hunter College where no investment bank or MBB would ever look to hire from. Until that mindset is broken, things will not change.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My Senior is in a major where the school matters—sigh. So we are forking over the $86k/yr over in-state. My sophomore is in my major where it really doesn’t matter- just a solid state school is fine.
The cost of higher education is ridiculous. Everyone should be angry at the industry that escalated prices so high—Fed govt loan industry.
Could you kindly expand on this? For what majors do you think the school doesn't matter?