Maybe for you in your warped universe.Anonymous wrote:Fake Harvard
End of story
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Harvard’s extension school website is perfectly clear on how to write the degree on your resume and CV. Always include Extension School or Extension Studies. You’re obviously purposely being deceptive when you strike Extension School from your resume, bio, and/or verbal communication. It’s shady and teases out you’re a liar with serious issues.
I would never pay for Harvard extension school. To me, it sounds like someone buying a degree to put Harvard on their resume. What’s the point?
The point is that if you’re living in Boston, enjoy learning and are lonely, the classes are a good place to meet people.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Harvard’s extension school website is perfectly clear on how to write the degree on your resume and CV. Always include Extension School or Extension Studies. You’re obviously purposely being deceptive when you strike Extension School from your resume, bio, and/or verbal communication. It’s shady and teases out you’re a liar with serious issues.
I would never pay for Harvard extension school. To me, it sounds like someone buying a degree to put Harvard on their resume. What’s the point?
Anonymous wrote:As a side note, the HES classes are 100% the same fine-by-ordinary-standards-but-easy-by-MIT-standards difficulty as the "real" Harvard classes, according to Harvard professors who teach both courses. Obviously you wouldn't find this hard to believe - it's not as if the in-person Harvard courses are exceptionally difficult, after all.Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I know someone who did this exactly but with Princeton. Wears his Princeton colors everywhere 🙄
This is fine. But if all you have to show for yourself is where you went to school, that says something about you. On the other hand, if the school gives you opportunities and inspires you to do more and be more -- who gives a *** whether it's HES or Princeton. I think too many people on this forum don't know anything about Harvard, HES, and are *shocked* that the real Harvard doesn't live up to whatever their ill formed expectations are for the institution.
For example did you know both the Education and Div. school have a very high admit rate? You don't see the level of online vitriol mostly by people who never set foot on campus. Did you know Oxford, LSE, Columbia, Northwestern, and Brown all have extension programs too? Yet, you don't see the ridiculous "university of phoenix" accusations at them. Did you know many adcoms at top universities have gone on record that they consider an ALB with extension to be equivalent rigor (academically) with the college?
And yet, the bumbnuts who never had the privilege to piss on the statue; come on occasion, to the yard, and rub the foot and take pictures as if tourist in a foreign land. They are faced with the prospect that someone could participate what they consider to be unattainable and elite, it threatens them. Frankly, getting a Harvard degree is Hard. Yet, they condemn the alternative pathways, such as the Extension School, for the prospect of potential failure looms as a harbinger of their own intrinsic limitations, a threat far more insidious than any external barriers. For in the realm of their imagination, the specter of one's own inadequacies casts a longer shadow. Thus, they retreat into the comforting embrace of the external gatekeepers, mocking alternative paths, and seeking solace in the safety of being barred from entry into her hallowed halls.
Ok you are full of sh&t. I went to MIT. Harvard is not hard at all. Most of the kids graduate with 4.0s. That's why MIT students would take classes there. Super easy.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I know someone who did this exactly but with Princeton. Wears his Princeton colors everywhere 🙄
This is fine. But if all you have to show for yourself is where you went to school, that says something about you. On the other hand, if the school gives you opportunities and inspires you to do more and be more -- who gives a *** whether it's HES or Princeton. I think too many people on this forum don't know anything about Harvard, HES, and are *shocked* that the real Harvard doesn't live up to whatever their ill formed expectations are for the institution.
For example did you know both the Education and Div. school have a very high admit rate? You don't see the level of online vitriol mostly by people who never set foot on campus. Did you know Oxford, LSE, Columbia, Northwestern, and Brown all have extension programs too? Yet, you don't see the ridiculous "university of phoenix" accusations at them. Did you know many adcoms at top universities have gone on record that they consider an ALB with extension to be equivalent rigor (academically) with the college?
And yet, the bumbnuts who never had the privilege to piss on the statue; come on occasion, to the yard, and rub the foot and take pictures as if tourist in a foreign land. They are faced with the prospect that someone could participate what they consider to be unattainable and elite, it threatens them. Frankly, getting a Harvard degree is Hard. Yet, they condemn the alternative pathways, such as the Extension School, for the prospect of potential failure looms as a harbinger of their own intrinsic limitations, a threat far more insidious than any external barriers. For in the realm of their imagination, the specter of one's own inadequacies casts a longer shadow. Thus, they retreat into the comforting embrace of the external gatekeepers, mocking alternative paths, and seeking solace in the safety of being barred from entry into her hallowed halls.
Ok you are full of sh&t. I went to MIT. Harvard is not hard at all. Most of the kids graduate with 4.0s. That's why MIT students would take classes there. Super easy.
MIT is way harder I will admit this. I have also taken some MIT classes through cross enrollment. But you're not the target audience my friend. I'm talking about why extension has so much hate from people not affiliated with Ivies. I can totally understand (even if I disagree) about someone who is 'threatened' because of HES relatively lax admission standards in comparison to the college. I can also see perspectives of people, such as yourself, who know MIT is harder (which it is). I'm talking about most of the idiots on here that are spreading obvious misinformation about HES.
TL;DR: maybe don't swing for the fences without understanding my point or context. I largely agree that MIT does not suffer from the grade inflation that Harvard does.
As a side note, the HES classes are 100% the same fine-by-ordinary-standards-but-easy-by-MIT-standards difficulty as the "real" Harvard classes, according to Harvard professors who teach both courses. Obviously you wouldn't find this hard to believe - it's not as if the in-person Harvard courses are exceptionally difficult, after all.Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I know someone who did this exactly but with Princeton. Wears his Princeton colors everywhere 🙄
This is fine. But if all you have to show for yourself is where you went to school, that says something about you. On the other hand, if the school gives you opportunities and inspires you to do more and be more -- who gives a *** whether it's HES or Princeton. I think too many people on this forum don't know anything about Harvard, HES, and are *shocked* that the real Harvard doesn't live up to whatever their ill formed expectations are for the institution.
For example did you know both the Education and Div. school have a very high admit rate? You don't see the level of online vitriol mostly by people who never set foot on campus. Did you know Oxford, LSE, Columbia, Northwestern, and Brown all have extension programs too? Yet, you don't see the ridiculous "university of phoenix" accusations at them. Did you know many adcoms at top universities have gone on record that they consider an ALB with extension to be equivalent rigor (academically) with the college?
And yet, the bumbnuts who never had the privilege to piss on the statue; come on occasion, to the yard, and rub the foot and take pictures as if tourist in a foreign land. They are faced with the prospect that someone could participate what they consider to be unattainable and elite, it threatens them. Frankly, getting a Harvard degree is Hard. Yet, they condemn the alternative pathways, such as the Extension School, for the prospect of potential failure looms as a harbinger of their own intrinsic limitations, a threat far more insidious than any external barriers. For in the realm of their imagination, the specter of one's own inadequacies casts a longer shadow. Thus, they retreat into the comforting embrace of the external gatekeepers, mocking alternative paths, and seeking solace in the safety of being barred from entry into her hallowed halls.
Ok you are full of sh&t. I went to MIT. Harvard is not hard at all. Most of the kids graduate with 4.0s. That's why MIT students would take classes there. Super easy.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I know someone who did this exactly but with Princeton. Wears his Princeton colors everywhere 🙄
This is fine. But if all you have to show for yourself is where you went to school, that says something about you. On the other hand, if the school gives you opportunities and inspires you to do more and be more -- who gives a *** whether it's HES or Princeton. I think too many people on this forum don't know anything about Harvard, HES, and are *shocked* that the real Harvard doesn't live up to whatever their ill formed expectations are for the institution.
For example did you know both the Education and Div. school have a very high admit rate? You don't see the level of online vitriol mostly by people who never set foot on campus. Did you know Oxford, LSE, Columbia, Northwestern, and Brown all have extension programs too? Yet, you don't see the ridiculous "university of phoenix" accusations at them. Did you know many adcoms at top universities have gone on record that they consider an ALB with extension to be equivalent rigor (academically) with the college?
And yet, the bumbnuts who never had the privilege to piss on the statue; come on occasion, to the yard, and rub the foot and take pictures as if tourist in a foreign land. They are faced with the prospect that someone could participate what they consider to be unattainable and elite, it threatens them. Frankly, getting a Harvard degree is Hard. Yet, they condemn the alternative pathways, such as the Extension School, for the prospect of potential failure looms as a harbinger of their own intrinsic limitations, a threat far more insidious than any external barriers. For in the realm of their imagination, the specter of one's own inadequacies casts a longer shadow. Thus, they retreat into the comforting embrace of the external gatekeepers, mocking alternative paths, and seeking solace in the safety of being barred from entry into her hallowed halls.
Ok you are full of sh&t. I went to MIT. Harvard is not hard at all. Most of the kids graduate with 4.0s. That's why MIT students would take classes there. Super easy.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I know someone who did this exactly but with Princeton. Wears his Princeton colors everywhere 🙄
This is fine. But if all you have to show for yourself is where you went to school, that says something about you. On the other hand, if the school gives you opportunities and inspires you to do more and be more -- who gives a *** whether it's HES or Princeton. I think too many people on this forum don't know anything about Harvard, HES, and are *shocked* that the real Harvard doesn't live up to whatever their ill formed expectations are for the institution.
For example did you know both the Education and Div. school have a very high admit rate? You don't see the level of online vitriol mostly by people who never set foot on campus. Did you know Oxford, LSE, Columbia, Northwestern, and Brown all have extension programs too? Yet, you don't see the ridiculous "university of phoenix" accusations at them. Did you know many adcoms at top universities have gone on record that they consider an ALB with extension to be equivalent rigor (academically) with the college?
And yet, the bumbnuts who never had the privilege to piss on the statue; come on occasion, to the yard, and rub the foot and take pictures as if tourist in a foreign land. They are faced with the prospect that someone could participate what they consider to be unattainable and elite, it threatens them. Frankly, getting a Harvard degree is Hard. Yet, they condemn the alternative pathways, such as the Extension School, for the prospect of potential failure looms as a harbinger of their own intrinsic limitations, a threat far more insidious than any external barriers. For in the realm of their imagination, the specter of one's own inadequacies casts a longer shadow. Thus, they retreat into the comforting embrace of the external gatekeepers, mocking alternative paths, and seeking solace in the safety of being barred from entry into her hallowed halls.