Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Or followed by Justice.
You need a JD for that.
-- works at DOJ
Depends on the office and role.
Grants doesn’t need a JD and positions go up to GS-14.
Non-lawyer jobs at DOJ aren't prestigious.
Anonymous wrote:White House fellowship would be at the top, no?
Anonymous wrote:Bachelor's in what? The answer is different depending on major -- CS is going to be one agency, accounting another, chemistry another, Chinese language and lit another.
Anonymous wrote:I don’t think CIA is all that prestigious.
For a lot of agencies, you can get a job there if your parent works there. Is that prestigious?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Accountant at the SEC
Will need to be a CPA, not just an Accountant, to really advance…
Anonymous wrote:I don’t.know about prestige but GAO has recently started hiring college grads (there were always a few but more now) and the work is pretty interesting.
Anonymous wrote:Presidential Management Fellow
Anonymous wrote:With just a bachelor's degree. I'm sorry to use prestige, I personally dislike that word, but I suppose it is somewhat synonymous with selective or highest standards. I'm assuming State is at or near the top (?), but I only base that on the fact they seem to have a lot of Ivy Leaguers and wealthy young adults. I'm sure I'm inviting snark, but I appreciate serious responses. I'm just a clueless mom trying to learn. Thank you sincerely.
Anonymous wrote:Accountant at the SEC
Anonymous wrote:Presidential Management Fellow
Anonymous wrote:FRB as a research assistant. Good pay, good mentoring, lots of hands-on training with data tools. It's a pit stop before applying for prestigious Econ PhD, law, or MBA programs.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:FRB as a research assistant. Good pay, good mentoring, lots of hands-on training with data tools. It's a pit stop before applying for prestigious Econ PhD, law, or MBA programs.
I don't know about overall prestige, but this is a baller job for a recent grad. Incredible instant network, great resume booster. Plus FRB offers relocation assistance and very generous tuition reimbursement so you can get a few of your prereqs out of the way for grad school, free, while on the job.
FRB is federal and has better benefits than other agencies. Plus they recruit and hire from a really diverse pool of applicants (gender, race, schools, etc.). And they really help RAs figure out grad school and career prep.
Diff pp here, yeah I wanted to stick to something purely federal but if not, above is accurate
Frb or nyfed gets a lot of t20/ivy ug applicants