Anonymous
Post 07/28/2017 09:06     Subject: SLAC then to Wall Street?

Anonymous wrote:This is the number of alums working at Goldman Sachs. Williams, Amherst, Middlebury, and Colgate are the clear standouts. All NESCAC members except Colgate, which is more pre-professional than most of the Ivies. Colleges not on the Northeast don't perform so well, so it may be of import to pick a SLAC there if doing so at all.

Amherst - 52
Bates - 8
Bowdoin - 33
Carleton - 10
Colby - 24
Colgate - 56
Davidson - 8
Hamilton - 33
Haverford - 14
Middlebury - 59
Pomona - 13
Swarthmore - 21
Vassar - 18
Wellesley - 34
Wesleyan - 25
Williams - 59



Thanks for sharing. What's the source of this info.?
Anonymous
Post 07/28/2017 04:20     Subject: SLAC then to Wall Street?

sorry quick correction- more pre-professional than most of the SLACs and comparable to an Ivy in that regard (Colgate)
Anonymous
Post 07/28/2017 04:19     Subject: SLAC then to Wall Street?

This is the number of alums working at Goldman Sachs. Williams, Amherst, Middlebury, and Colgate are the clear standouts. All NESCAC members except Colgate, which is more pre-professional than most of the Ivies. Colleges not on the Northeast don't perform so well, so it may be of import to pick a SLAC there if doing so at all.

Amherst - 52
Bates - 8
Bowdoin - 33
Carleton - 10
Colby - 24
Colgate - 56
Davidson - 8
Hamilton - 33
Haverford - 14
Middlebury - 59
Pomona - 13
Swarthmore - 21
Vassar - 18
Wellesley - 34
Wesleyan - 25
Williams - 59

Anonymous
Post 07/27/2017 23:00     Subject: Re:SLAC then to Wall Street?

Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:But SLACs don't usually offer finance or business majors, do they?


No. But they produce critical thinkers who analyze and write well.

I'd take one of those over a business major any day of the week.

So a business major can't think critically or analyze and write well?

Ok.


https://www.washingtonpost.com/news/grade-point/wp/2017/01/28/business-is-the-most-popular-college-major-but-that-doesnt-mean-its-a-good-choice/?utm_term=.c16d27afdf57

"Students majoring in business spend less time studying than anyone else on campus, according to the National Survey of Student Engagement. They also spend less time reading and writing than other majors. One analysis of 10 public four-year universities in Texas found that of the 40 courses needed for a business degree, only one required a writing assignment of 20 or more pages, and only three required assignments of at least 10 pages.

What’s more, the results of national standardized tests, such as the Collegiate Learning Assessment Plus, given to freshmen and seniors, found that students who major in business made significantly fewer gains in college in critical thinking, writing and communication, and analytical reasoning than those who studied mathematics, science, and engineering, as well as the traditional liberal arts (philosophy, history, and literature)."
Anonymous
Post 07/27/2017 22:29     Subject: Re:SLAC then to Wall Street?

Anonymous wrote:
PaleoConPrep wrote:I've heard Trinity is good for finance. Why does your son want to work with the sleazy pigs on Wall Street?


Sleazy pigs like Ted Cruz's wife?


As far as I can tell, Trinity is where you go when you weren't a very good student at a seriously preppy private school. Trinity probably has to be good at finance because that is going to be the choice of such students. They are a fairly well=connected bunch.
Anonymous
Post 07/27/2017 18:29     Subject: SLAC then to Wall Street?

Plenty of my Davidson friends are now on wall Street fwiw
Anonymous
Post 07/27/2017 18:25     Subject: SLAC then to Wall Street?

I knew a guy who did this from Washington and Lee. Not sure if he had connections or not.
Anonymous
Post 07/27/2017 18:17     Subject: Re:SLAC then to Wall Street?

Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:But SLACs don't usually offer finance or business majors, do they?


No. But they produce critical thinkers who analyze and write well.

I'd take one of those over a business major any day of the week.

So a business major can't think critically or analyze and write well?

Ok.


I always dreaded interviewing business majors because the jobs I was hiring for required a lot of writing. Just not something they are strong in.

On the non quant side of IB, they love classics majors.
Anonymous
Post 07/27/2017 17:44     Subject: Re:SLAC then to Wall Street?

Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:But SLACs don't usually offer finance or business majors, do they?


No. But they produce critical thinkers who analyze and write well.

I'd take one of those over a business major any day of the week.

So a business major can't think critically or analyze and write well?

Ok.
Anonymous
Post 07/27/2017 17:24     Subject: Re:SLAC then to Wall Street?

Anonymous wrote:But SLACs don't usually offer finance or business majors, do they?


No. But they produce critical thinkers who analyze and write well.

I'd take one of those over a business major any day of the week.
Anonymous
Post 07/27/2017 17:15     Subject: Re:SLAC then to Wall Street?

But SLACs don't usually offer finance or business majors, do they?
Anonymous
Post 05/26/2017 17:44     Subject: Re:SLAC then to Wall Street?

Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:Tons of students from Colgate, Bucknell and Lehigh (Patriot League SLACs) land on Wall St post-graduation.


Are they recruited on campus?


I'm 20 years out from one of these schools, but in my time lots of Wall Street firms recruited on campus - I would say that Wall Street and/or big accounting firms were probably the most common career path (or law school).
Anonymous
Post 05/26/2017 15:44     Subject: SLAC then to Wall Street?

Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:Kid is a recruited athlete who will end up at a SLAC. His goal is to work on Wall Street. I hoped to steer him to a larger university with strronger programs in finance. But he would not be able to play at those schools. Is a SLAC to Wall Street dream a pipe dream?


Wall Street? I thought all the gunner kiddos dream of doing private equity or venture capital in LA/SF these days?


And if you knew anything about the career path you would know you interview for IB in college and then for PE after a year in IB.
Anonymous
Post 05/26/2017 13:11     Subject: SLAC then to Wall Street?

Anonymous wrote:Kid is a recruited athlete who will end up at a SLAC. His goal is to work on Wall Street. I hoped to steer him to a larger university with strronger programs in finance. But he would not be able to play at those schools. Is a SLAC to Wall Street dream a pipe dream?


Wall Street? I thought all the gunner kiddos dream of doing private equity or venture capital in LA/SF these days?
Anonymous
Post 05/26/2017 12:12     Subject: SLAC then to Wall Street?

Anonymous wrote:Kid is a recruited athlete who will end up at a SLAC. His goal is to work on Wall Street. I hoped to steer him to a larger university with strronger programs in finance. But he would not be able to play at those schools. Is a SLAC to Wall Street dream a pipe dream?


The top 50 universities for getting a front office investment banking job

1 3 London School of Economics 35.6% 2.5%
2 1 Columbia University 36.2% 1.40%
3 2 University of Pennsylvania 35.30% 0.9%
4 6 New York University 33.9% 1.6%
5 4 University College London 33.2% 1%
6 8 Imperial College London 33.2% 0.9%
7 9 University of Chicago 33.4% 0.70%
8 22 University of Oxford 33.30% 0.70%
9 11 University of California, Berkeley 33.30% 0.4%
10 7 Carnegie Mellon University 33.1% 0.30%
11 13 Yale University 32.6% 0.30%
12 17 Dartmouth College 32.80% 0.1%
13 12 Cornell University 32.2% 0.5%
14 19 Harvard University 32.1% 0.5%
15 5 Stanford University 31.6% 0.60%
16 10 Princeton University 31.40% 0.60%
17 24 MIT 31.20% 0.8%
18 38 University of Bristol 31.5% 0.4%
19 15 Northwestern University 31.5% 0.30%
20 16 Tsinghua University 31.40% 0.4%
21 18 University of Michigan 30.8% 0.60%
22 43 University of Warwick 30.5% 0.8%
23 14 Johns Hopkins University 30.6% 0.30%
24 28 Duke University 30.5% 0.30%
25 26 Frankfurt School of Finance & Management 30.6% 0.1%


http://news.efinancialcareers.com/us-en/199099/top-50-universities-getting-front-office-investment-banking-job/