Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Not being accepted to the Princeton Tiddlywinks Club could be a career wrecker.
New poster: you’re a jerk. Some clubs have a real impact on the future. An EMT club gets you certified, credit hours and clinical hours for med school apps. A law related fraternity gets you guest speakers for connections and info, jobs placement bumps, and special study materials and tutoring for the LSAT.
Anonymous wrote:DC at Cornell just went through this. Essentially hazing with the business clubs that operate as frats and seek to embarrass applicants during the "interview" round by forcing them to tell jokes until they run out or making them solve impossible brain teasers. Most of these pre-professional clubs take 5-10 members out of 250 applicants.
Anonymous wrote:DC at Cornell just went through this. Essentially hazing with the business clubs that operate as frats and seek to embarrass applicants during the "interview" round by forcing them to tell jokes until they run out or making them solve impossible brain teasers. Most of these pre-professional clubs take 5-10 members out of 250 applicants.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The clubs are adopting the Greek mentality.
I was just pondering the fact that people who reject colleges that have a substantial Greek presence out of hand seem to embrace the competitiveness of the Ivy Club system. Because, "connections," you know...
Anonymous wrote:The clubs are adopting the Greek mentality.
Anonymous wrote:My son at an Ivy hasn’t run into this.
He made the Club sport team and joined the club he wanted.
Anonymous wrote:This is correlated to grade inflation. There was a NYT article last year about Yale's incredible grade inflation.
https://www.nytimes.com/2023/12/05/nyregion/yale-grade-inflation.html
When everyone has an A in every class, how can you distinguish yourself? Make even the identity clubs competitive (eg: Asian Club)
https://www.theatlantic.com/ideas/archive/2023/09/yale-college-undergrad-clubs-competitive/675219/
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Dc (entering freshman) was a little shocked by the student club culture. Every single club needs applications and interviews and most have a very low probability of acceptance. Seriously regretting the decision to go to an Ivy. This was hardly DC's idea of what college life would be. We were willy to not know about any of this stuff?
Sounds like fake news. Is this every club?
It may apply to that club but mine has never heard of anything like this at their ivy, in their 3rd yr. Lots of clubs are just restricted on freshmen. None require wealth. Lots have open entry.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Dc (entering freshman) was a little shocked by the student club culture. Every single club needs applications and interviews and most have a very low probability of acceptance. Seriously regretting the decision to go to an Ivy. This was hardly DC's idea of what college life would be. We were willy to not know about any of this stuff?
Sounds like fake news. Is this every club?
Anonymous wrote:My DS is a highly recruited athlete freshman at an Ivy, and he got many invites to join exclusive clubs. One of his teammates' older brothers is the head of one of those clubs. DS was told that he could be a member of the club by: a) coming from a wealthy family or b) an athlete. He fit the latter.
Anonymous wrote:Dc (entering freshman) was a little shocked by the student club culture. Every single club needs applications and interviews and most have a very low probability of acceptance. Seriously regretting the decision to go to an Ivy. This was hardly DC's idea of what college life would be. We were willy to not know about any of this stuff?