Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If you're talking about socially elite, and you certainly should be, then the only schools that matter are.....
Princeton
Willians/Amherst
Harvard
Dartmouth
Bowdoin/Midd
Wellesley/Wesleyan
The rest are vulgar, jumped up, pre-professional diploma mills.
Take out Williams, Amherst, Bowdoin (?), Middlebury (?!), Wellesley, Wesleyan () and add in Yale, Columbia, Stanford, MIT, Penn, Chicago, Northwestern, Duke, Cornell, Brown, Dartmouth and then we're talking.
I'm sorry my poor child but absolutely no one is looking at a Bowdoin or a Middlebury degree and thinking, "Ah, yes, socially elite."
Dear, you either know or you don't.
DP - if you really think you're going to convince people on an anonymous internet board that schools like Bowdoin or Middlebury are elite, you've got a long, uphill battle ahead of you. The kids that attend those schools might be bright, but they're not elite. Trust me.
They are "socially elite" apparently.
They're not. If you send your child to somewhere like Middlebury expecting them to be treated as "socially elite" in life, you've put your money on the wrong horse. I went to Andover, matriculated to an Ivy, and most of my social circle (for better or worse) attended schools within the Ivy/Ivy Plus range. While Williams and Amherst will get some respect, and while most would readily acknowledge that kids at many LACs are bright and curious individuals, no one would label those schools as "socially elite", at least not moreso than the top 10-or-so universities that have long been favored by the upper-middle classes in America.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Hahahaha Bowdoin and Middlebury alums really have jumped the shark, haven't they. Next thing you'll start hearing how schools like Tulane and Tufts are basically Harvard. LOL.
How would you rank Bowdoin, Middlebury, Wellesley, Tufts and Tulane in terms of prestige?
Wellesley and then the rest.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Hahahaha Bowdoin and Middlebury alums really have jumped the shark, haven't they. Next thing you'll start hearing how schools like Tulane and Tufts are basically Harvard. LOL.
How would you rank Bowdoin, Middlebury, Wellesley, Tufts and Tulane in terms of prestige?
Anonymous wrote:Hahahaha Bowdoin and Middlebury alums really have jumped the shark, haven't they. Next thing you'll start hearing how schools like Tulane and Tufts are basically Harvard. LOL.
Anonymous wrote:I’d put Wellesley back in. Elite people have heard of elite schools. Hillary gave it a boost.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If you're talking about socially elite, and you certainly should be, then the only schools that matter are.....
Princeton
Willians/Amherst
Harvard
Dartmouth
Bowdoin/Midd
Wellesley/Wesleyan
The rest are vulgar, jumped up, pre-professional diploma mills.
Take out Williams, Amherst, Bowdoin (?), Middlebury (?!), Wellesley, Wesleyan () and add in Yale, Columbia, Stanford, MIT, Penn, Chicago, Northwestern, Duke, Cornell, Brown, Dartmouth and then we're talking.
I'm sorry my poor child but absolutely no one is looking at a Bowdoin or a Middlebury degree and thinking, "Ah, yes, socially elite."
Dear, you either know or you don't.
DP - if you really think you're going to convince people on an anonymous internet board that schools like Bowdoin or Middlebury are elite, you've got a long, uphill battle ahead of you. The kids that attend those schools might be bright, but they're not elite. Trust me.
Ah, but you've missed my point haven't you? I have no interest in convincing anybody of anything.....you either know or you don't. Either way it matters little to me.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If you're talking about socially elite, and you certainly should be, then the only schools that matter are.....
Princeton
Willians/Amherst
Harvard
Dartmouth
Bowdoin/Midd
Wellesley/Wesleyan
The rest are vulgar, jumped up, pre-professional diploma mills.
Take out Williams, Amherst, Bowdoin (?), Middlebury (?!), Wellesley, Wesleyan () and add in Yale, Columbia, Stanford, MIT, Penn, Chicago, Northwestern, Duke, Cornell, Brown, Dartmouth and then we're talking.
I'm sorry my poor child but absolutely no one is looking at a Bowdoin or a Middlebury degree and thinking, "Ah, yes, socially elite."
Dear, you either know or you don't.
DP - if you really think you're going to convince people on an anonymous internet board that schools like Bowdoin or Middlebury are elite, you've got a long, uphill battle ahead of you. The kids that attend those schools might be bright, but they're not elite. Trust me.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If you're talking about socially elite, and you certainly should be, then the only schools that matter are.....
Princeton
Willians/Amherst
Harvard
Dartmouth
Bowdoin/Midd
Wellesley/Wesleyan
The rest are vulgar, jumped up, pre-professional diploma mills.
Take out Williams, Amherst, Bowdoin (?), Middlebury (?!), Wellesley, Wesleyan () and add in Yale, Columbia, Stanford, MIT, Penn, Chicago, Northwestern, Duke, Cornell, Brown, Dartmouth and then we're talking.
I'm sorry my poor child but absolutely no one is looking at a Bowdoin or a Middlebury degree and thinking, "Ah, yes, socially elite."
Dear, you either know or you don't.
DP - if you really think you're going to convince people on an anonymous internet board that schools like Bowdoin or Middlebury are elite, you've got a long, uphill battle ahead of you. The kids that attend those schools might be bright, but they're not elite. Trust me.
They are "socially elite" apparently.
They're not. If you send your child to somewhere like Middlebury expecting them to be treated as "socially elite" in life, you've put your money on the wrong horse. I went to Andover, matriculated to an Ivy, and most of my social circle (for better or worse) attended schools within the Ivy/Ivy Plus range. While Williams and Amherst will get some respect, and while most would readily acknowledge that kids at many LACs are bright and curious individuals, no one would label those schools as "socially elite", at least not moreso than the top 10-or-so universities that have long been favored by the upper-middle classes in America.
Aside from HYP, Chicago, Stanford, and MIT, the social elite flock to SLACs. Most MC and many UMC (more in terms of financial status than social status) haven't heard of Williams, Amherst, Swarthmore, Pomona, etc. You have to have gone to certain elite high schools and have been raised in families exposed to graduate level education to be familiar with the top LACs.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If you're talking about socially elite, and you certainly should be, then the only schools that matter are.....
Princeton
Willians/Amherst
Harvard
Dartmouth
Bowdoin/Midd
Wellesley/Wesleyan
The rest are vulgar, jumped up, pre-professional diploma mills.
Take out Williams, Amherst, Bowdoin (?), Middlebury (?!), Wellesley, Wesleyan () and add in Yale, Columbia, Stanford, MIT, Penn, Chicago, Northwestern, Duke, Cornell, Brown, Dartmouth and then we're talking.
I'm sorry my poor child but absolutely no one is looking at a Bowdoin or a Middlebury degree and thinking, "Ah, yes, socially elite."
Dear, you either know or you don't.
DP - if you really think you're going to convince people on an anonymous internet board that schools like Bowdoin or Middlebury are elite, you've got a long, uphill battle ahead of you. The kids that attend those schools might be bright, but they're not elite. Trust me.
They are "socially elite" apparently.
They're not. If you send your child to somewhere like Middlebury expecting them to be treated as "socially elite" in life, you've put your money on the wrong horse. I went to Andover, matriculated to an Ivy, and most of my social circle (for better or worse) attended schools within the Ivy/Ivy Plus range. While Williams and Amherst will get some respect, and while most would readily acknowledge that kids at many LACs are bright and curious individuals, no one would label those schools as "socially elite", at least not moreso than the top 10-or-so universities that have long been favored by the upper-middle classes in America.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If you're talking about socially elite, and you certainly should be, then the only schools that matter are.....
Princeton
Willians/Amherst
Harvard
Dartmouth
Bowdoin/Midd
Wellesley/Wesleyan
The rest are vulgar, jumped up, pre-professional diploma mills.
Take out Williams, Amherst, Bowdoin (?), Middlebury (?!), Wellesley, Wesleyan () and add in Yale, Columbia, Stanford, MIT, Penn, Chicago, Northwestern, Duke, Cornell, Brown, Dartmouth and then we're talking.
I'm sorry my poor child but absolutely no one is looking at a Bowdoin or a Middlebury degree and thinking, "Ah, yes, socially elite."
Dear, you either know or you don't.
DP - if you really think you're going to convince people on an anonymous internet board that schools like Bowdoin or Middlebury are elite, you've got a long, uphill battle ahead of you. The kids that attend those schools might be bright, but they're not elite. Trust me.
They are "socially elite" apparently.
They're not. If you send your child to somewhere like Middlebury expecting them to be treated as "socially elite" in life, you've put your money on the wrong horse. I went to Andover, matriculated to an Ivy, and most of my social circle (for better or worse) attended schools within the Ivy/Ivy Plus range. While Williams and Amherst will get some respect, and while most would readily acknowledge that kids at many LACs are bright and curious individuals, no one would label those schools as "socially elite", at least not moreso than the top 10-or-so universities that have long been favored by the upper-middle classes in America.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If you're talking about socially elite, and you certainly should be, then the only schools that matter are.....
Princeton
Willians/Amherst
Harvard
Dartmouth
Bowdoin/Midd
Wellesley/Wesleyan
The rest are vulgar, jumped up, pre-professional diploma mills.
Take out Williams, Amherst, Bowdoin (?), Middlebury (?!), Wellesley, Wesleyan () and add in Yale, Columbia, Stanford, MIT, Penn, Chicago, Northwestern, Duke, Cornell, Brown, Dartmouth and then we're talking.
I'm sorry my poor child but absolutely no one is looking at a Bowdoin or a Middlebury degree and thinking, "Ah, yes, socially elite."
Dear, you either know or you don't.
DP - if you really think you're going to convince people on an anonymous internet board that schools like Bowdoin or Middlebury are elite, you've got a long, uphill battle ahead of you. The kids that attend those schools might be bright, but they're not elite. Trust me.
They are "socially elite" apparently.