Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Not willing to go into debt was why I couldn't take advantage of top school offers. I regret we didn't try harder now that passing along that legacy would have helped my kids.
Isn't white privilege enough?
Anonymous wrote:Not willing to go into debt was why I couldn't take advantage of top school offers. I regret we didn't try harder now that passing along that legacy would have helped my kids.
Anonymous wrote:Both my husband and I went to the same Big 10 school undergrad. You're right, when we were young we used to run into a lot of snobbery AND we even run into it now again as our kids are applying to / attending college.
But did it stand in our way? No. Are we proud of our school? You betcha! Do we fly our flag on game days? Yup.
I'm not sure if it ever bothered us that people were snobby snots about their elite schools and looked down on our Big 10 pedigree. We attended a school we loved, we thrived there and we have been successful in life beyond our wildest dreams. We have no complaints and would do it all again.
My advice to you, OP, if you encounter people who are snobbish about their school is for you to own it for your school. Don't let little people with little minds negatively impact the way that you talk about your school. Hopefully, in matriculating there, you made the best choice you could under the circumstances you had.
Keep in mind, that people can be like wolf packs when they sense weakness. So the more robustly and happily you talk about your non-elite school the less inclined the pack will be to attack you and the more likely they will be to go after easier prey.
Anonymous wrote:DH went to Radford. He makes high six figures, and we live a comfortable life. He started off at a low level at the company that he has worked at for 25+ years but really has worked his way to the top based off merit. No one cares where he went to school.
Anonymous wrote: Big Ten all the way. I feel fine about it. People tend to underestimate me, which often works to my advantage.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Nobody would ever claim there aren't successful alums from gigantic 10,000-40,000 student universities.
But it's like, great, you know one person from Indiana University who is a multi-millionaire? Good for him. Really. That's awesome. But that's one person. On average, from which school (Harvard or Indiana) would you say their respective graduates are enjoying better relative success? Since that data is readily available, let's take a look:
Kelley: https://kelley.iu.edu/recruiters-companies/graduate/_files/GCSEmploymentReport17-18.pdf
Harvard: http://ocs.fas.harvard.edu/files/ocs/files/final_20152016_annual_report.pdf
It's clearly Harvard. To say that "it doesn't matter where you go to school" is objectively idiotic. So, brush up on those logical reasoning skills, too. Ever hear of a small sample size? An anecdote doesn't combat hard data.
Sharp parents pay big bucks to live in the tippy top public districts or claw their way into expensive premier privates to get a shot at the creme de la creme colleges. The "only grad school matters" and "we're not into the rat race" memes are what parents tell themselves after they've raised merely average children. You're just trying to rationalize your underachieving kids.
God you really suck at this human being thing. Really really suck.
I love you.
You win the Internet.
Anonymous wrote:I went to an Ivy (lower tier back then) but honestly the most "successful" people from my small town are not those who went to the fanciest universities. Great people skills seem to pay off better in the long run.