Anonymous wrote:No substitute for an elite campus. Folks that haven't attended one can't possibly understand the diff in ethos.
It's tacky to say out loud, I guess, but the diff between her social circle and prospective spouses at Penn and Big State U is night and day.
On-campus recruiting is night and day.
Grad school placement is night and day.
And on and on.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:In reference to the rat race, the fixation with elite colleges, all hoop jumping, all the tutoring, etc. For a moment I was speechless. In the end I just told her, "You'll regret it if you don't push yourself." What is the point?
Hmm, I regret pushing myself so hard. I pushed very hard through high school, went to a highly selective college, graduated with honors but hugely burnt out, and spent the next 5 years trying to find myself again. I had no idea why I was there or what I wanted to learn or do. If you arrive at the prestigious school the wrong way -- just because you did everything your parents asked -- you won't know what to make of the opportunities there.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Students at elite schools are charming, have non-stop motors, they're machines. Students at lower tier schools can be smart (but let's be honest, most aren't) but they lack "it" factor.
Where you went to college is a badge. Of course there are successful people from every four year college, but it's not one alum that defines the school, it's the range of students. The entire bottom half of a Big State U is idiots, many of which graduate, which stigmatizes you even if you're the top 10%.
As someone who transferred to an elite after a year at a top public U, I can say it is night and day. To the point I just laugh when folks say it doesn't matter, there are smart kids at every school, hype some pointless honors program, etc.
I'm guessing there wasn't a writing requirement at your "elite"...
Anonymous wrote:Elite college admissions work like a stamp of quality: get into an elite, and you have been vetted — employers can count on some degree of literacy and intelligence. The effort & money is well spent for the stamp of approval alone. Some degree programs work like that, too, e.g. Illinois engineering, Carnegie Mellon computer science.
For most other colleges, the admission and degree don't provide that. You have to rely on hard work and demonstrated ability to convince employers and grad schools that you can think and lead -- not unfair, but certainly not as easy as being accepted from the word go.
Anonymous wrote:If you have a strong IQ and a work ethic you don't need any of it.
Anonymous wrote:Students at elite schools are charming, have non-stop motors, they're machines. Students at lower tier schools can be smart (but let's be honest, most aren't) but they lack "it" factor.
Where you went to college is a badge. Of course there are successful people from every four year college, but it's not one alum that defines the school, it's the range of students. The entire bottom half of a Big State U is idiots, many of which graduate, which stigmatizes you even if you're the top 10%.
As someone who transferred to an elite after a year at a top public U, I can say it is night and day. To the point I just laugh when folks say it doesn't matter, there are smart kids at every school, hype some pointless honors program, etc.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Stanley Hauerwas wrote a beautiful piece in the magazine First Things back in 2010 for Christian students heading off to college.
Thanks for sharing!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Your daughter is correct.
There is no point to an elite college.... Unless your intention is to have rich friends.
The point to life is to be a good person, have good friends, be kind to strangers, give back to your community and (hopefully) have a close family.
A surgeon from Penn is no happier than a plumber, if you can afford a house, food, have close friends.
Once you have a certain amount of money, happiness does not increase with more money and eventually declines.
What? Or to have the kind of career that only an elite college can open for you? I work in finance and I know there are banks and money managers who will *only* recruit from the ivy league. They do that because they can, because they get SO many applicants that they can easily afford to be choosy. I know finance is not most people's idea of a good time so substitute any competitive career (journalism, magazines, book publishing, politics, museum curating, certain high profile tech companies) for what I just said.
Which just shows how ignorant the old school finance world is. Google did a study, after only hiring from elite schools. They changed their model and found student from elite schools were not better employees than students from state schools.
You need to educate yourself on the current trends in new business and hiring. advising your kids on knowledge that is 30 years old will not serve them well.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Your daughter is correct.
There is no point to an elite college.... Unless your intention is to have rich friends.
The point to life is to be a good person, have good friends, be kind to strangers, give back to your community and (hopefully) have a close family.
A surgeon from Penn is no happier than a plumber, if you can afford a house, food, have close friends.
Once you have a certain amount of money, happiness does not increase with more money and eventually declines.
What? Or to have the kind of career that only an elite college can open for you? I work in finance and I know there are banks and money managers who will *only* recruit from the ivy league. They do that because they can, because they get SO many applicants that they can easily afford to be choosy. I know finance is not most people's idea of a good time so substitute any competitive career (journalism, magazines, book publishing, politics, museum curating, certain high profile tech companies) for what I just said.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Your daughter is correct.
There is no point to an elite college.... Unless your intention is to have rich friends.
The point to life is to be a good person, have good friends, be kind to strangers, give back to your community and (hopefully) have a close family.
A surgeon from Penn is no happier than a plumber, if you can afford a house, food, have close friends.
Once you have a certain amount of money, happiness does not increase with more money and eventually declines.
dcum's love to laud plumbers and blue collar trades without actually being blue collar themselves. there's a reason why blue collar moms and dads also push their kids to college. blue collar people (god bless them) pay with their bodies at age 50+.
Anonymous wrote:In reference to the rat race, the fixation with elite colleges, all hoop jumping, all the tutoring, etc. For a moment I was speechless. In the end I just told her, "You'll regret it if you don't push yourself." What is the point?