Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I’ve heard a lot of these stories. It’s hard to justify a private college in a struggling economy. The job market is so uncertain.
unemployment has been at record lows for 5 years now
because a few years ago is exactly like the moment we’re in now!Anonymous wrote:My sis in law graduated from Ross a few years ago with an accounting degree and had tons of job offers.
Anonymous wrote:This is an unfortunate situation for the OP’s son. It also highlights the advantage of attending a smaller school like Bucknell or Colgate with a strong Greek system and a tight alumni base that isn’t built solely around sports. Your career network has way more tentacles at those schools. The OP mentioned that career services was no help, but what about fraternity connections or reaching out to alums eager to hire him simply because he's a Wolverine? My guess is OP didn’t mention those options because they weren’t available. There’s a reason very few kids in business or finance majors at Bucknell or Colgate graduate jobless, and it isn’t just because of the academic reputation. Attending one of those schools, joining a top-tier fraternity, building a relationship with career services early, and tapping into the alumni network is basically a cheat code for stacking cheese right out of college.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Why the hell did he go to Michigan if he was instate for UVA? That makes no sense. That was a dumb decision on your part.
Are you clinically insane? Michigan is solidly a tier above UVA.
Anonymous wrote:If he went to Michigan why is he limiting his job search to the DC metro???
And yes, if you or he only wanted to live in the DC area,.I would have been best to go to college in VA, DC, or MD.
He needs to search for more positions in the mid west at this point.
Anonymous wrote:My sis in law graduated from Ross a few years ago with an accounting degree and had tons of job offers.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Why the hell did he go to Michigan if he was instate for UVA? That makes no sense. That was a dumb decision on your part.
Are you clinically insane? Michigan is solidly a tier above UVA.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Why the hell did he go to Michigan if he was instate for UVA? That makes no sense. That was a dumb decision on your part.
Are you clinically insane? Michigan is solidly a tier above UVA.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Why the hell did he go to Michigan if he was instate for UVA? That makes no sense. That was a dumb decision on your part.
Are you clinically insane? Michigan is solidly a tier above UVA.
Disagree. Largely the same. For research-heavy areas like engineering and hard sciences I might agree. For anything else I disagree and would lean towards Virginia being slightly better, but not much. Definitely not meriting your hyperbole.
Anonymous wrote:This is an unfortunate situation for the OP’s son. It also highlights the advantage of attending a smaller school like Bucknell or Colgate with a strong Greek system and a tight alumni base that isn’t built solely around sports. Your career network has way more tentacles at those schools. The OP mentioned that career services was no help, but what about fraternity connections or reaching out to alums eager to hire him simply because he's a Wolverine? My guess is OP didn’t mention those options because they weren’t available. There’s a reason very few kids in business or finance majors at Bucknell or Colgate graduate jobless, and it isn’t just because of the academic reputation. Attending one of those schools, joining a top-tier fraternity, building a relationship with career services early, and tapping into the alumni network is basically a cheat code for stacking cheese right out of college.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Why the hell did he go to Michigan if he was instate for UVA? That makes no sense. That was a dumb decision on your part.
Are you clinically insane? Michigan is solidly a tier above UVA.