Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Has he done anything substantive to show interest in his field while in college? Did he do research for a professor? Did he join any professional societies? Intern during the semester anywhere? Work a campus job? A summer job?
It's been 1.5 years since COVID were rolled back. If he has done nothing to sell about himself, he's just lazy.
I'm his mother and I'm not going to disagree with your appraisal. Now that we have that out of the way, how does he get a good job with a practically vacant resume and one month from earning an Ivy League bachelor's degree?
Starbucks or equivelant while he searches for something more substantive.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:When I graduated from an Ivy with an engineering degree back in 1991, I only knew one person who got a job by May. We all managed to become productive citizens since. He’ll be fine.
Is this 1991?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Starbucks, McDonalds, Lowes, Home Depot, taking practical classes at a local community college that are designed to train for specific jobs.
Yeah Ivy League grad should definitely go work at Home Depot and attend community college. Jeez it’s like you can’t wait to make this guy a working class prole. Guess what: he has better options he just needs to go get one.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Has he done anything substantive to show interest in his field while in college? Did he do research for a professor? Did he join any professional societies? Intern during the semester anywhere? Work a campus job? A summer job?
It's been 1.5 years since COVID were rolled back. If he has done nothing to sell about himself, he's just lazy.
I'm his mother and I'm not going to disagree with your appraisal. Now that we have that out of the way, how does he get a good job with a practically vacant resume and one month from earning an Ivy League bachelor's degree?
Starbucks or equivelant while he searches for something more substantive.
Anonymous wrote:Starbucks, McDonalds, Lowes, Home Depot, taking practical classes at a local community college that are designed to train for specific jobs.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:There are lots of jobs out there I bet he just doesn’t seem them as good enough- child protective services always needs employees (yes you can get some with a bachelor’s degree), paralegal. Hell tell him to get a job in retail and see if he can work his way up to management. That’s what my 21 year old cousin with only a HS diploma did.
Of course these aren’t good enough. The kid should be in some kind of professional program not working at McDonalds or CPS which is one step above.
Should be? Maybe he should’ve worked harder then.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:When I graduated from an Ivy with an engineering degree back in 1991, I only knew one person who got a job by May. We all managed to become productive citizens since. He’ll be fine.
Engineering and you didn't have any internships? No employer offered you and your friends jobs at the end of your rising senior summer internships?
No. Internships were something a small number of kids got back then, not the whole class. Most potential employers were laying people off, not hiring interns.
Well in 2004 my now DH graduated from a third tier school with a degree in engineering. Almost everyone in his major had a job offer by March of senior year.
Yes, folks, thanks for the history lesson. Guess what? Things have changed since 1991 and since 2004.
Well, in 1989 most of my graduating class was not able to find a job by graduation, and most of us had to work doing whatever we could find until we received that first professional break.
Schools and temp agencies are hiring OP. Lots of federal internships are also available but there is competition. There are plenty of federal problems for young college graduates and usually large Universities have career fairs in person or even virtual career fairs.
+1 goodness, younger people act like we had it easy in the 1980s early 1990s. No, we didn't. If anything, it's much easier now to apply for jobs than back in the early 90s when you literally had to cold call, go to the career center and look at the job boards, or read the want ads in the newspaper.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What kind of job does he want? Any kid with an Ivy league degree can get *a* job. Seriously.
I don't know. He doesn't know. Ideally, he'd like to make a lot of money. But I don't think he realizes the degree isn't enough? His classmates who are going to make a lot of money have excellent resumes and/or lots of family connections. He/we have neither.
Don't let him move home and stop bankrolling him. He's smart enough to figure it out. You shouldn't solve this for him.
Anonymous wrote:One word - Plastics.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What kind of job does he want? Any kid with an Ivy league degree can get *a* job. Seriously.
I don't know. He doesn't know. Ideally, he'd like to make a lot of money. But I don't think he realizes the degree isn't enough? His classmates who are going to make a lot of money have excellent resumes and/or lots of family connections. He/we have neither.
Don't let him move home and stop bankrolling him. He's smart enough to figure it out. You shouldn't solve this for him.
At the Ivies, kids generally live on-campus, and they kick you out on graduation day.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What kind of job does he want? Any kid with an Ivy league degree can get *a* job. Seriously.
I don't know. He doesn't know. Ideally, he'd like to make a lot of money. But I don't think he realizes the degree isn't enough? His classmates who are going to make a lot of money have excellent resumes and/or lots of family connections. He/we have neither.
Don't let him move home and stop bankrolling him. He's smart enough to figure it out. You shouldn't solve this for him.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What kind of job does he want? Any kid with an Ivy league degree can get *a* job. Seriously.
I don't know. He doesn't know. Ideally, he'd like to make a lot of money. But I don't think he realizes the degree isn't enough? His classmates who are going to make a lot of money have excellent resumes and/or lots of family connections. He/we have neither.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What kind of job does he want? Any kid with an Ivy league degree can get *a* job. Seriously.
I don't know. He doesn't know. Ideally, he'd like to make a lot of money. But I don't think he realizes the degree isn't enough? His classmates who are going to make a lot of money have excellent resumes and/or lots of family connections. He/we have neither.