Yea, right. Harvard is Harvard.
Anonymous wrote:This list is ridiculous. I’ve known plenty of Bucknell grads and haven’t met a single one who doesn’t earn well above average. Most have been working on The Street in client-facing roles since graduation. And whatever you think of Tulane (an endless debate on this board) are we really supposed to believe its graduates earn less than the national average for college grads?
Anonymous wrote:So odd. I thought employers said they were taking Harvard off their list after the protests!
Anonymous wrote:OP is copying from a reddit thread:
https://www.reddit.com/r/ApplyingToCollege/comments/16tenex/revealed_employer_preferences_in_t50ish_colleges/
There's lots of nuance that would need to be discussed, like the fact that this is one year post-graduation, supposedly not factoring in students in grad school/law school/med school
Or maybe just read the reddit thread.
Anonymous wrote:This list is ridiculous. I’ve known plenty of Bucknell grads and haven’t met a single one who doesn’t earn well above average. Most have been working on The Street in client-facing roles since graduation. And whatever you think of Tulane (an endless debate on this board) are we really supposed to believe its graduates earn less than the national average for college grads?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:1. OP stole this from
https://www.reddit.com/r/ApplyingToCollege/comments/16tenex/revealed_employer_preferences_in_t50ish_colleges/
2. It's College Scorecard data.
The College Scorecard dataset only considers data from students receiving federal student aid.
Several groups are left out,
including undocumented and international students,
on top of those in more financially advantageous situations
It also doesn't consider cost of living in the area of employment.
Yeah this data is not really worth discussing.
Not really worth discussing? Other than the literal majority of American households who qualify under this umbrella.
Anonymous wrote:1. OP stole this from
https://www.reddit.com/r/ApplyingToCollege/comments/16tenex/revealed_employer_preferences_in_t50ish_colleges/
2. It's College Scorecard data.
The College Scorecard dataset only considers data from students receiving federal student aid.
Several groups are left out,
including undocumented and international students,
on top of those in more financially advantageous situations
It also doesn't consider cost of living in the area of employment.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Mid-career numbers for MIT pretty lackluster compared to Harvard and Penn or Stanford. or Yale or Princeton. I wonder why?
a higher percent goes to PhD/academia
Nope. It’s that engineering is a solid but not great paying career.
Its not all about money….but also the MIT and CMU engineers we know were making over 300k ten years ago in their 30s. Now making 450-500k plus bonuses. Marry either one of them to another similar salary (which is what they each did) and thats a mega rich family. What on earth kind of money does Dcum think you need in life? MIT and other top engineering school grads make very high salaries
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Brown grad with a humanities degree here. My starting salary wasn’t high (though was totally fine), but I had multiple offers and a job waiting for me at graduation. I now make $750k in an arts job that at least isn’t actively making the world worse that I didn’t have to go to grad school for. Starting salary isn’t everything.
You likely are one of very few in your industry making $750k. To be blunt, how many arts jobs do you think brown alum take up making that kind of money.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:1. OP stole this from
https://www.reddit.com/r/ApplyingToCollege/comments/16tenex/revealed_employer_preferences_in_t50ish_colleges/
2. It's College Scorecard data.
The College Scorecard dataset only considers data from students receiving federal student aid.
Several groups are left out,
including undocumented and international students,
on top of those in more financially advantageous situations
It also doesn't consider cost of living in the area of employment.
Yeah this data is not really worth discussing.
Anonymous wrote:Brown grad with a humanities degree here. My starting salary wasn’t high (though was totally fine), but I had multiple offers and a job waiting for me at graduation. I now make $750k in an arts job that at least isn’t actively making the world worse that I didn’t have to go to grad school for. Starting salary isn’t everything.
Anonymous wrote:This list is ridiculous. I’ve known plenty of Bucknell grads and haven’t met a single one who doesn’t earn well above average. Most have been working on The Street in client-facing roles since graduation. And whatever you think of Tulane (an endless debate on this board) are we really supposed to believe its graduates earn less than the national average for college grads?