Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You get to be around rich people. I went to a selective college as a middle class kid. I got a good education, but I could have gotten that at my state school. The biggest thing I got was marrying into money.
Is this that attractive, though? We're not wealthy ($250k HHI), but upper middle class is good enough to let us do the things we want. Are there that many people honestly wanting more? Seems stressful.
Have you been on this website long?
+10000. Are you truly baffled that different people like different things?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You get to be around rich people. I went to a selective college as a middle class kid. I got a good education, but I could have gotten that at my state school. The biggest thing I got was marrying into money.
Is this that attractive, though? We're not wealthy ($250k HHI), but upper middle class is good enough to let us do the things we want. Are there that many people honestly wanting more? Seems stressful.
You’re showing your Midwest roots. Most on this board do not regard 250k as UMC, at all.
What you think doesn't matter.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:To compete with the best & brightest & most highly motivated.
To get a shot at the best jobs & internships.
Prestige.
Money.
Exposure to a more diverse group of peers.
To broaden one's knowledge & experience beyond that available at the in-state flagship.
To expand one's thinking & appreciation of differences.
No. Just the prestige. You can get there rest at a hundred other colleges too.
Ignorance is bliss.
DP. Not ignorant. I went to Midwest state flagship and am more successful than many who went to these schools. It is just the prestige as far as I can see.
I am sure there are many that went to those schools that are way more successful than you (considering, you likely don't have the last name of Bezos, Musk, Gates...although is this Warren Buffet on DCUM?). What is the median income of your Midwest state flagship after 10 years, 20 years, 40 years...is it the same or better than the elite schools (even accounting for the inherited wealth of elite grads)?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You get to be around rich people. I went to a selective college as a middle class kid. I got a good education, but I could have gotten that at my state school. The biggest thing I got was marrying into money.
Is this that attractive, though? We're not wealthy ($250k HHI), but upper middle class is good enough to let us do the things we want. Are there that many people honestly wanting more? Seems stressful.
Have you been on this website long?
Anonymous wrote:I really believe that Health is Wealth. I used to care about selective school shit, but I don't anymore. I have two boys who were hit a bit hard by covid lockdown (like everyone .. mine lost middle school years, stuck in NYC apartment) and were hit a bit hard by crazy expectations from environment (1500 SAT score should be retaken. etc). Again like everyone.
I think guys need to build good relationships in these years. It's much harder to do that later. Find a place where you can do that. Don't worry about the rest. We all know people who went to No Name College and are hugely successful. We also know men who have zero adult friends.
Take care of yourself.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:To compete with the best & brightest & most highly motivated.
To get a shot at the best jobs & internships.
Prestige.
Money.
Exposure to a more diverse group of peers.
To broaden one's knowledge & experience beyond that available at the in-state flagship.
To expand one's thinking & appreciation of differences.
No. Just the prestige. You can get there rest at a hundred other colleges too.
Ignorance is bliss.
DP. Not ignorant. I went to Midwest state flagship and am more successful than many who went to these schools. It is just the prestige as far as I can see.
What are you basing this on though? There is zero question grads of these elite institutions continue to be over represented in higher levels of business, government, and culture in our society. So the fact that you've done better than 5 people you know who went to one of these schools doesn't really mean diddly.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:An obvious allure is that if your family makes say $100,000 you can attend most of the top schools for free or nearly free. No idea what your state "land-grant" school might offer...perhaps the same because of the statspeop you have to attend one of the top schools (??). BTW...only on DCUM does anybody refer to schools as land-grant.
Well, yeah, I referred to it that way so people could see where I'm coming from. I give the name of the school if someone asks in real life, but the details aren't important here.
I guess...except you said is it a financial thing where people are trying to make the highest $$$s possible...not a financial thing where maybe your entire college is free. Does land-grant = flagship?
No, land-grant ≠ flagship. For example, in Indiana, Indiana is the flagship. Purdue is a land-grant.
Most of us don't know or care what the difference is. DP
Flagship is more prestigious.
Way too sweeping a statement. You need to add. “maybe” or “in many cases”. UGA is the flagship. GT is better in Engineering and other STEM Ditto UNC and NS State and IU Bloomington and Purdue and UVA and VT and even VCC in some allied health and fine arts area. (yes, it’s true. In some areas VT and even VCU are stronger than UVA. UVA booster needs to stop hyperventilating). Berkeley is CA’s unofficial flagship, and I know a decent percentage of DCUM views UCLA as more prestigious in some programs. Another UCs are best in niche areas. Similarly Pitt and Penn State (although Pitt falls into an odd, quasi public category).
Anonymous wrote:You get to be around rich people. I went to a selective college as a middle class kid. I got a good education, but I could have gotten that at my state school. The biggest thing I got was marrying into money.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:An obvious allure is that if your family makes say $100,000 you can attend most of the top schools for free or nearly free. No idea what your state "land-grant" school might offer...perhaps the same because of the statspeop you have to attend one of the top schools (??). BTW...only on DCUM does anybody refer to schools as land-grant.
Well, yeah, I referred to it that way so people could see where I'm coming from. I give the name of the school if someone asks in real life, but the details aren't important here.
I guess...except you said is it a financial thing where people are trying to make the highest $$$s possible...not a financial thing where maybe your entire college is free. Does land-grant = flagship?
No, land-grant ≠ flagship. For example, in Indiana, Indiana is the flagship. Purdue is a land-grant.
Most of us don't know or care what the difference is. DP
Flagship is more prestigious.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:To compete with the best & brightest & most highly motivated.
To get a shot at the best jobs & internships.
Prestige.
Money.
Exposure to a more diverse group of peers.
To broaden one's knowledge & experience beyond that available at the in-state flagship.
To expand one's thinking & appreciation of differences.
LMAO
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I think you can study with "the best and the brightest" at any top 50 schools or beyond. The only thing is prestige (most everyone knows Harvard). In terms of diversity, probably not true at HYP esp socioeconomic diversity. These schools continue to hugely favor the wealthy. In terms of making money in the future, that really is much more dependent on the student and his/her major.
I lost all respect for Harvard etc. since I learned that 50-70% (sometimes more) of the entering freshmen class consists of legacies, recruited athletes, URMs, donors, VIPs, celebrities' offsprings, Faculty & staff's children etc. etc. You no longer have the best and the brightest there.
Certainly there would be some stars and the average quality would be good but I would much choose a school that selects most (70-90%) of the students on merit basis.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You get to be around rich people. I went to a selective college as a middle class kid. I got a good education, but I could have gotten that at my state school. The biggest thing I got was marrying into money.
Is this that attractive, though? We're not wealthy ($250k HHI), but upper middle class is good enough to let us do the things we want. Are there that many people honestly wanting more? Seems stressful.
You’re showing your Midwest roots. Most on this board do not regard 250k as UMC, at all.