Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I was accepted into an Ivy and I chose to attend UVA. My parents did not want to pay the Ivy tuition; they could pay cash for UVA. No regrets.
Just based on college culture alone I would have taken out loans to go to Harvard or Brown than a state school in a southern state.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:1. I am not sure regret is a useful way to spend your time.
2. I received an excellent education. It is a lot more about what you put in than where you go.
This.
No one in my office went to an ivy. Top tier gov affair firm.
And we laugh sometimes in front of 40 year olds who mention they went to Harvard. I tilt my head and say “awww you were smart at 18 to get in why is that relevant now.”
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I was accepted into an Ivy and I chose to attend UVA. My parents did not want to pay the Ivy tuition; they could pay cash for UVA. No regrets.
Just based on college culture alone I would have taken out loans to go to Harvard or Brown than a state school in a southern state.
Anonymous wrote:DD got accepted at 2 Ivy Law Schools but instead chose a Law School not even in the top 100, because 1) the gave her full tuition and 2) They were ranked #1 in the field she wanted to specialize in.
Anonymous wrote:It's easy to see why so few of you ended up at an Ivy. You either didn't understand the question OP asked or are ignoring it.
Clearly it's directed at folks who in retrospect had an actual, realistic chance at admission to an Ivy but didn't push it. Many of you don't qualify to respond -- by a long shot -- and those of you who got in a turned it down don't qualify either.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:1. I am not sure regret is a useful way to spend your time.
2. I received an excellent education. It is a lot more about what you put in than where you go.
This.
No one in my office went to an ivy. Top tier gov affair firm.
And we laugh sometimes in front of 40 year olds who mention they went to Harvard. I tilt my head and say “awww you were smart at 18 to get in why is that relevant now.”
So at 40 you’ll be telling the 23 year old Harvard graduates that you went to the Flagship state school, not just any old state school.
Anonymous wrote:Do you think it's affected your career or is any difference negligible?