Anonymous wrote:It's the name. The name sucks
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I went to Case and it's a very STEM (specifically engineering) heavy school.
Private high schools don't send many kids to study engineering (at any college) because of the salaries. My kids attend a well-regarded private and the wealthy by-in-large have kids who go into finance or law. Engineering is viewed as a stable but middle to upper middle class career. Sure, some engineers combine their scientific knowledge with business (or law) and make a ton of money but most do not.
It's been interesting to observe all of this as someone who did not grow up with any sort of money.
Case is mainly regarded as a premed school.
Not so much on the engineering side.
When I was there it seemed heavily engineering. This was 30 years ago.
Regardless, the same thinking applies. Medicine is increasingly seen as a middle class to upper middle class profession as well.
If you go to Sidwell or Dalton or Andover there are very few parents who are physicians. The average physician in the US makes like $300K.
That is bottom 10% of the non-aid kids at Sidwell and pretty much poverty wages at Dalton.![]()
Most wealthy kids are not smart enough to be engineers. My experience with the children of wealth is they aren’t very strong in math and science. They also are not motivated to have a hard major. Finance is ridiculously easy “math.” Wealthy children want jobs that sound 1% but aren’t hard.
Anonymous wrote:Ehh.
The wealthy kids are getting some $$$ down the road from parents. They know the way to make real generational wealth in this country isn’t as a worker bee (e.g., engineer working hard for that measly paycheck).
They use the IB finance gig to move to PE to move to PC or Infra, where they’ll eventually get carry. They know what you don’t.
But keep on being a worker bee.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I went to Case and it's a very STEM (specifically engineering) heavy school.
Private high schools don't send many kids to study engineering (at any college) because of the salaries. My kids attend a well-regarded private and the wealthy by-in-large have kids who go into finance or law. Engineering is viewed as a stable but middle to upper middle class career. Sure, some engineers combine their scientific knowledge with business (or law) and make a ton of money but most do not.
It's been interesting to observe all of this as someone who did not grow up with any sort of money.
Case is mainly regarded as a premed school.
Not so much on the engineering side.
When I was there it seemed heavily engineering. This was 30 years ago.
Regardless, the same thinking applies. Medicine is increasingly seen as a middle class to upper middle class profession as well.
If you go to Sidwell or Dalton or Andover there are very few parents who are physicians. The average physician in the US makes like $300K.
That is bottom 10% of the non-aid kids at Sidwell and pretty much poverty wages at Dalton.![]()
Most wealthy kids are not smart enough to be engineers. My experience with the children of wealth is they aren’t very strong in math and science. They also are not motivated to have a hard major. Finance is ridiculously easy “math.” Wealthy children want jobs that sound 1% but aren’t hard.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I went to Case and it's a very STEM (specifically engineering) heavy school.
Private high schools don't send many kids to study engineering (at any college) because of the salaries. My kids attend a well-regarded private and the wealthy by-in-large have kids who go into finance or law. Engineering is viewed as a stable but middle to upper middle class career. Sure, some engineers combine their scientific knowledge with business (or law) and make a ton of money but most do not.
It's been interesting to observe all of this as someone who did not grow up with any sort of money.
Case is mainly regarded as a premed school.
Not so much on the engineering side.
When I was there it seemed heavily engineering. This was 30 years ago.
Regardless, the same thinking applies. Medicine is increasingly seen as a middle class to upper middle class profession as well.
If you go to Sidwell or Dalton or Andover there are very few parents who are physicians. The average physician in the US makes like $300K.
That is bottom 10% of the non-aid kids at Sidwell and pretty much poverty wages at Dalton.![]()
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Bc it’s not a finance, biglaw or similar feeder.
yup. IF you're at a $55K+ private, 95% of the full-pay parents are
-biglaw
-finance
-business executives
Not engineers and only a few sub-specialty physicians. You're not paying $55k/kid for kindergarten on an engineer, pediatrician or ob/gyn salary.
Kids tends to follow their parents' career paths.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I went to Case and it's a very STEM (specifically engineering) heavy school.
Private high schools don't send many kids to study engineering (at any college) because of the salaries. My kids attend a well-regarded private and the wealthy by-in-large have kids who go into finance or law. Engineering is viewed as a stable but middle to upper middle class career. Sure, some engineers combine their scientific knowledge with business (or law) and make a ton of money but most do not.
It's been interesting to observe all of this as someone who did not grow up with any sort of money.
This. Engineering is seen as a very middle class profession. Doctors and lawyers don’t want their kids to be engineers. I am a lawyer and no one I know has a kid in this track.
lol I'm a lawyer as well and my DS is going to Georgia Tech to study Biomedical Engineering at the #2 ranked school in the country. I'm quite sure he will do alright for himself.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I went to Case and it's a very STEM (specifically engineering) heavy school.
Private high schools don't send many kids to study engineering (at any college) because of the salaries. My kids attend a well-regarded private and the wealthy by-in-large have kids who go into finance or law. Engineering is viewed as a stable but middle to upper middle class career. Sure, some engineers combine their scientific knowledge with business (or law) and make a ton of money but most do not.
It's been interesting to observe all of this as someone who did not grow up with any sort of money.
This. Engineering is seen as a very middle class profession. Doctors and lawyers don’t want their kids to be engineers. I am a lawyer and no one I know has a kid in this track.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I went to Case and it's a very STEM (specifically engineering) heavy school.
Private high schools don't send many kids to study engineering (at any college) because of the salaries. My kids attend a well-regarded private and the wealthy by-in-large have kids who go into finance or law. Engineering is viewed as a stable but middle to upper middle class career. Sure, some engineers combine their scientific knowledge with business (or law) and make a ton of money but most do not.
It's been interesting to observe all of this as someone who did not grow up with any sort of money.
Case is mainly regarded as a premed school.
Not so much on the engineering side.
When I was there it seemed heavily engineering. This was 30 years ago.
Regardless, the same thinking applies. Medicine is increasingly seen as a middle class to upper middle class profession as well.
If you go to Sidwell or Dalton or Andover there are very few parents who are physicians. The average physician in the US makes like $300K.
That is bottom 10% of the non-aid kids at Sidwell and pretty much poverty wages at Dalton.![]()
You are smoking too much hooka. Doctors make good salaries. Depending on your specialty, that could be a great salary. I view doctors as pre professionals that are close to the 1 percent or in the 1 percent. Consultants, lawyers (big law) and investment bankers and VCs make more. But I would not look down on doctors at all.
My kid is premed and the profession is definitely one that is white collared.
No, you're the one that needs to leave the hooka bubble. I'm a physician. I make a very good income at around $300K.
However, I can't begin to afford the lifestyle of many of the families at at our private school.
I joke about this with a few other doctor friends at our school. We are definitely "the poors" which is completely absurd.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Because they already have their own K-12 private that feeds into it. In fact, it's located on Case Western's previous campus before they expanded: https://www.wra.net/
That doesn't explain it. Last year there is only one wra student accepted to Case Western.
https://www.wra.net/academics/college-counseling/college-counseling-at-wra
I’m from Cleveland and never really thought of WRA a feeder to CWRU.
I think Cleveland is the drawback. Most DC area kids do not want to be in Cleveland.
Yet DMV kids seem to want to, and apparently try hard to, attend Johns Hopkins. Yes, of course JHU is overall > CWRU, but still....
Personally, I think Cleveland's a wonderful city, with lots to offer for anyone from pretty much anywhere.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I went to Case and it's a very STEM (specifically engineering) heavy school.
Private high schools don't send many kids to study engineering (at any college) because of the salaries. My kids attend a well-regarded private and the wealthy by-in-large have kids who go into finance or law. Engineering is viewed as a stable but middle to upper middle class career. Sure, some engineers combine their scientific knowledge with business (or law) and make a ton of money but most do not.
It's been interesting to observe all of this as someone who did not grow up with any sort of money.
Case is mainly regarded as a premed school.
Not so much on the engineering side.
When I was there it seemed heavily engineering. This was 30 years ago.
Regardless, the same thinking applies. Medicine is increasingly seen as a middle class to upper middle class profession as well.
If you go to Sidwell or Dalton or Andover there are very few parents who are physicians. The average physician in the US makes like $300K.
That is bottom 10% of the non-aid kids at Sidwell and pretty much poverty wages at Dalton.![]()
You are smoking too much hooka. Doctors make good salaries. Depending on your specialty, that could be a great salary. I view doctors as pre professionals that are close to the 1 percent or in the 1 percent. Consultants, lawyers (big law) and investment bankers and VCs make more. But I would not look down on doctors at all.
My kid is premed and the profession is definitely one that is white collared.
Anonymous wrote:It can be solid if the cost is similar to in state, but for 66k tuition, you have to convince yourself that it is even worth applying, even if the school gives 30k scholarships, still not convinced
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Because they already have their own K-12 private that feeds into it. In fact, it's located on Case Western's previous campus before they expanded: https://www.wra.net/
That doesn't explain it. Last year there is only one wra student accepted to Case Western.
https://www.wra.net/academics/college-counseling/college-counseling-at-wra
I’m from Cleveland and never really thought of WRA a feeder to CWRU.
I think Cleveland is the drawback. Most DC area kids do not want to be in Cleveland.