Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Notice how big and celebrated publics like UT Austin and Georgia Tech didn't make the list.
Right? But Rice and Emory did... it's very telling.
Comparing with UT Austin makes no sense. Remember UT Austin is one of the cheapest Public flagships in the country. A person who goes to UT Austin for CS and can still not afford the university, could be really poor and may have many many extenuating circumstances that keep their salary low. Most of the UT CS students (Largely Asian and White) may not take any loans for their education, so they are largely excluded from the analysis and may be earning quite well.
This would not be the case with private universities where tuition alone runs close to $60K a year
These are Pell grant and students on financial aid so that excuse doesn't work.
A person who would qualify for Pell grants, probably gets all expenses covered at Harvard. Not so at UT. The SES of the person who is on financial aid at Harvard is totally different from the SES of the person who is on Financial Aid at UT Austin. Think about this.
Anonymous wrote:The list is stupid.
No one thinks a Yale grad in CS is better than an MIT grad in CS. NO ONE, probably not even the Yale CS grad.
Or a SLO grad is better than UMich grad in CS.
The SLO grad probably works in the Bay Area, where it's stupid expensive (I used to live there), and the pay would reflect that. Who knows where the UMich grad is working.
Anonymous wrote:UMD didn’t make the cut?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Notice how big and celebrated publics like UT Austin and Georgia Tech didn't make the list.
Right? But Rice and Emory did... it's very telling.
Comparing with UT Austin makes no sense. Remember UT Austin is one of the cheapest Public flagships in the country. A person who goes to UT Austin for CS and can still not afford the university, could be really poor and may have many many extenuating circumstances that keep their salary low. Most of the UT CS students (Largely Asian and White) may not take any loans for their education, so they are largely excluded from the analysis and may be earning quite well.
This would not be the case with private universities where tuition alone runs close to $60K a year
These are Pell grant and students on financial aid so that excuse doesn't work.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This is useless and misleading.
+1 It only shows those who took out federal loans. Sure, it excludes those who are full pay, but that also excludes some UMC/MC families who sent their kids to cheap in state schools with a 529.
It also doesn't take into account *where* they are working. $150K in Silicon Valley doesn't take you that far. $100K in Philly takes you a lot further.
https://www.payscale.com/college-salary-report/best-schools-by-majors/computer-science
I used to work in the Bay Area. When I moved to the DC area, and looked at salaries for my level, it was so much lower. Luckily, my Bay Area employer let me keep my Bay Area salary.
+1000 It's useless data, especially if the COL is not taken into account.
My recent grad (not CS major) living in Madison Wi is making the same as their friends living in Chicago. Guess who is do much better financially?
+1 useless list
My Rutger grad niece is making six figures with zero debt. She would not be on the list. But, their friends who took out loans would be on the list, and even though they are making similar amounts, they are struggling because of the loans. My niece is about to purchase her first condo at 26. Their friends are still living at home trying to pay off their debt.
Context matters. This list isn't looking at "debt loads" or "quality of life" or "cost of living". It's simply looking at salary 4 years out of undergrad, that's it! Nothing else. From a straight up simple 'salary' perspective it's useful. There can be a million caveats if you play that game. I happen to know doctors making over a million $s per year who still "struggle" with their finances, doesn't mean 1million+ per year isn't a great income.
It's not useful because it only looks at those who took out federal loans. The % of college grads who take out federal loans is less than 50% of all college grads. So, the list is pretty skewed.
$150K salary in Bay Area is nothing. $150K salary in Philly is awesome.
So...go to Penn for CS and stay in Philly...and you are living large!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This is useless and misleading.
+1 It only shows those who took out federal loans. Sure, it excludes those who are full pay, but that also excludes some UMC/MC families who sent their kids to cheap in state schools with a 529.
It also doesn't take into account *where* they are working. $150K in Silicon Valley doesn't take you that far. $100K in Philly takes you a lot further.
https://www.payscale.com/college-salary-report/best-schools-by-majors/computer-science
I used to work in the Bay Area. When I moved to the DC area, and looked at salaries for my level, it was so much lower. Luckily, my Bay Area employer let me keep my Bay Area salary.
+1000 It's useless data, especially if the COL is not taken into account.
My recent grad (not CS major) living in Madison Wi is making the same as their friends living in Chicago. Guess who is do much better financially?
+1 useless list
My Rutger grad niece is making six figures with zero debt. She would not be on the list. But, their friends who took out loans would be on the list, and even though they are making similar amounts, they are struggling because of the loans. My niece is about to purchase her first condo at 26. Their friends are still living at home trying to pay off their debt.
Context matters. This list isn't looking at "debt loads" or "quality of life" or "cost of living". It's simply looking at salary 4 years out of undergrad, that's it! Nothing else. From a straight up simple 'salary' perspective it's useful. There can be a million caveats if you play that game. I happen to know doctors making over a million $s per year who still "struggle" with their finances, doesn't mean 1million+ per year isn't a great income.
It's not useful because it only looks at those who took out federal loans. The % of college grads who take out federal loans is less than 50% of all college grads. So, the list is pretty skewed.
$150K salary in Bay Area is nothing. $150K salary in Philly is awesome.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This is useless and misleading.
+1 It only shows those who took out federal loans. Sure, it excludes those who are full pay, but that also excludes some UMC/MC families who sent their kids to cheap in state schools with a 529.
It also doesn't take into account *where* they are working. $150K in Silicon Valley doesn't take you that far. $100K in Philly takes you a lot further.
https://www.payscale.com/college-salary-report/best-schools-by-majors/computer-science
I used to work in the Bay Area. When I moved to the DC area, and looked at salaries for my level, it was so much lower. Luckily, my Bay Area employer let me keep my Bay Area salary.
+1000 It's useless data, especially if the COL is not taken into account.
My recent grad (not CS major) living in Madison Wi is making the same as their friends living in Chicago. Guess who is do much better financially?
+1 useless list
My Rutger grad niece is making six figures with zero debt. She would not be on the list. But, their friends who took out loans would be on the list, and even though they are making similar amounts, they are struggling because of the loans. My niece is about to purchase her first condo at 26. Their friends are still living at home trying to pay off their debt.
Context matters. This list isn't looking at "debt loads" or "quality of life" or "cost of living". It's simply looking at salary 4 years out of undergrad, that's it! Nothing else. From a straight up simple 'salary' perspective it's useful. There can be a million caveats if you play that game. I happen to know doctors making over a million $s per year who still "struggle" with their finances, doesn't mean 1million+ per year isn't a great income.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Notice how big and celebrated publics like UT Austin and Georgia Tech didn't make the list.
Right? But Rice and Emory did... it's very telling.
Comparing with UT Austin makes no sense. Remember UT Austin is one of the cheapest Public flagships in the country. A person who goes to UT Austin for CS and can still not afford the university, could be really poor and may have many many extenuating circumstances that keep their salary low. Most of the UT CS students (Largely Asian and White) may not take any loans for their education, so they are largely excluded from the analysis and may be earning quite well.
This would not be the case with private universities where tuition alone runs close to $60K a year
Anonymous wrote:
Yale! Is that a typo for Princeton.
.Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The people complaining have DCs that went to a school that didn't make the list. This is the most impartial data available on the web.
The most impartial data on the web is found in bios on LinkedIn and on company websites. Look there and you'll see that, for the same position, those with degrees from less selective colleges far outnumber those with degrees from elite colleges. The path to success is paved by the individual, not the college.
Uh LinkedIn bios don't tell you how much someone makes. The salary clearly tells you how much a certain graduate is worth and its those 40 top schools are worth more than the other.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This is useless and misleading.
+1 It only shows those who took out federal loans. Sure, it excludes those who are full pay, but that also excludes some UMC/MC families who sent their kids to cheap in state schools with a 529.
It also doesn't take into account *where* they are working. $150K in Silicon Valley doesn't take you that far. $100K in Philly takes you a lot further.
https://www.payscale.com/college-salary-report/best-schools-by-majors/computer-science
I used to work in the Bay Area. When I moved to the DC area, and looked at salaries for my level, it was so much lower. Luckily, my Bay Area employer let me keep my Bay Area salary.
+1000 It's useless data, especially if the COL is not taken into account.
My recent grad (not CS major) living in Madison Wi is making the same as their friends living in Chicago. Guess who is do much better financially?
+1 useless list
My Rutger grad niece is making six figures with zero debt. She would not be on the list. But, their friends who took out loans would be on the list, and even though they are making similar amounts, they are struggling because of the loans. My niece is about to purchase her first condo at 26. Their friends are still living at home trying to pay off their debt.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This is useless and misleading.
+1 It only shows those who took out federal loans. Sure, it excludes those who are full pay, but that also excludes some UMC/MC families who sent their kids to cheap in state schools with a 529.
It also doesn't take into account *where* they are working. $150K in Silicon Valley doesn't take you that far. $100K in Philly takes you a lot further.
https://www.payscale.com/college-salary-report/best-schools-by-majors/computer-science
I used to work in the Bay Area. When I moved to the DC area, and looked at salaries for my level, it was so much lower. Luckily, my Bay Area employer let me keep my Bay Area salary.
+1000 It's useless data, especially if the COL is not taken into account.
My recent grad (not CS major) living in Madison Wi is making the same as their friends living in Chicago. Guess who is do much better financially?
+1 useless list
My Rutger grad niece is making six figures with zero debt. She would not be on the list. But, their friends who took out loans would be on the list, and even though they are making similar amounts, they are struggling because of the loans. My niece is about to purchase her first condo at 26. Their friends are still living at home trying to pay off their debt.