Anonymous wrote:Steve Jobs went briefly to Reed which for intellectual endeavors is considered s top college. There he learned the Beauty of calligraphy which influenced his product design. Education is about expanding the
Mind. The correlation to earnings or prestige is misplaced
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:With a global economy and technical skills required for every white collar gig and so many youths completing bachelors degrees you can not compare previous generations to millennials. It's more competitive than ever. Status degrees certainly don't hurt.
Of course "status degrees" don't hurt. But there always have been & always will be plenty of highly successful people without degrees from top schools. I am a millennial (born in 1991) & have multiple friends from high school who are doing very well despite having graduated from colleges that many DCUM posters would consider average at best.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This thread actually clarifies a lot about DC for me. It has the reputation for being a city full of really awful people. I've defended that more times than I can remember by telling people that it not that people from DC are awful. They are just busy and stressed because it's a tough place to live and work.
I was wrong. You people suck. I'm thankful I didn't raised my kids anywhere near DC. They were babies and preschoolers the first time. When we moved back they were grown. Seriously, go back and read this thread. If you are "grooming" your kids to be anything other than kind, loving, hard-working, compassionate people committed to finding their own path - you fail as a parent. If you are pushing them towards the college of your dreams, please seek therapy. I see the result in real life in DC and here on dcum and it's really, really ugly.
THIS is why we are choosing between a monster and a criminal for POTUS.
+1
I'm with you, PP -- except for the last sentence of tacked-on politics. This place is filled with hyper-competitive sociopaths.
Anonymous wrote:This thread actually clarifies a lot about DC for me. It has the reputation for being a city full of really awful people. I've defended that more times than I can remember by telling people that it not that people from DC are awful. They are just busy and stressed because it's a tough place to live and work.
I was wrong. You people suck. I'm thankful I didn't raised my kids anywhere near DC. They were babies and preschoolers the first time. When we moved back they were grown. Seriously, go back and read this thread. If you are "grooming" your kids to be anything other than kind, loving, hard-working, compassionate people committed to finding their own path - you fail as a parent. If you are pushing them towards the college of your dreams, please seek therapy. I see the result in real life in DC and here on dcum and it's really, really ugly.
THIS is why we are choosing between a monster and a criminal for POTUS.
Anonymous wrote:Seems so unfair to posters like OP, who find themselves forced to bow down to like-minded parents with kids that got into even better schools yet unable to pull rank over sane parents whose kids are at schools that are merely "average."
Anonymous wrote: Yeah, I have a friend like this. Her son is awesome. He went to a great high school. But his grades were not that great. He ended up going to a so-so college. Used to read all about him on Facebook regarding his high school years. But I haven't heard a peep
about him since he got into a so-so college. I think she's embarrassed. But she's like that. Sad.
Anonymous wrote:With a global economy and technical skills required for every white collar gig and so many youths completing bachelors degrees you can not compare previous generations to millennials. It's more competitive than ever. Status degrees certainly don't hurt.
????Anonymous wrote:Right, she's the sad one. Pot, meet ketle.