Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Daughter just graduated with a history major from a SLAC. She just started a job at cybersecurity company as a consultant. She interned with the company in DC last year. Not all interns received offers. Her ability to write was probably a very important factor.
Fascinating. SLAC again
No, nothing fascinating about a graduate of a small college landing a job--unless, of course, your job is to promote LACs.
If anything it reflects the forum’s interest. There’s a big UVA/W&M/LAC culture here. Sometimes my eyes light up when the typical elite universities come up, because they’re becoming a rarity of conversation
Agree.
Websites with college boards seem to be dominated by LAC marketers. Nothing wrong about reading the LAC hype, but readers miss out on the tremendous variety of offerings and options available at large universities--both public and private.
If interested in a particular major, visit the website of a Big Ten university and investigate the courses, programs, research opportunities, internship/externship opportunities, job placement, etc. You might be pleasantly surprised.
LAC folks just seem to have a lot of time on their hands and resort, unnecessarily, to making exaggerated and often false assertions.
Whether one prefers a small school or a big university, the key is to take advantage of the opportunities offered.
I went to a university and so did all 3 of my college-aged children, but i think the “discovery” of other majors is pretty exaggerated. Most American students are covered by the 40 or so majors at a liberal arts college. You lose out on like sports management or non-Econ business at some schools, but they aren’t really necessary things to study. Sure there’s a lot more of things, but there’s a lot more undergrads, and grad students and post docs. The class options are immense; but, many students don’t really take anything overly advanced that would take an LAC out of the picture.
This was longer than I wanted it, but I’ve seen a lot of “fed up” university parents make some pretty unfair comments about LACs
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The CS folks should consider heading out to SF. My kid had multiple offers from AI companies…and says firms are poaching employees like crazy. ML background.
Also, surprisingly cheap to rent in SF proper…much cheaper than renting in Palo Alto or Mountain View (all the AI companies are in SF proper so not an issue).
What do you consider surprisingly cheap?
Anonymous wrote:The CS folks should consider heading out to SF. My kid had multiple offers from AI companies…and says firms are poaching employees like crazy. ML background.
Also, surprisingly cheap to rent in SF proper…much cheaper than renting in Palo Alto or Mountain View (all the AI companies are in SF proper so not an issue).
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Daughter just graduated with a history major from a SLAC. She just started a job at cybersecurity company as a consultant. She interned with the company in DC last year. Not all interns received offers. Her ability to write was probably a very important factor.
Fascinating. SLAC again
No, nothing fascinating about a graduate of a small college landing a job--unless, of course, your job is to promote LACs.
If anything it reflects the forum’s interest. There’s a big UVA/W&M/LAC culture here. Sometimes my eyes light up when the typical elite universities come up, because they’re becoming a rarity of conversation
Agree.
Websites with college boards seem to be dominated by LAC marketers. Nothing wrong about reading the LAC hype, but readers miss out on the tremendous variety of offerings and options available at large universities--both public and private.
If interested in a particular major, visit the website of a Big Ten university and investigate the courses, programs, research opportunities, internship/externship opportunities, job placement, etc. You might be pleasantly surprised.
LAC folks just seem to have a lot of time on their hands and resort, unnecessarily, to making exaggerated and often false assertions.
Whether one prefers a small school or a big university, the key is to take advantage of the opportunities offered.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Daughter just graduated with a history major from a SLAC. She just started a job at cybersecurity company as a consultant. She interned with the company in DC last year. Not all interns received offers. Her ability to write was probably a very important factor.
Fascinating. SLAC again
No, nothing fascinating about a graduate of a small college landing a job--unless, of course, your job is to promote LACs.
If anything it reflects the forum’s interest. There’s a big UVA/W&M/LAC culture here. Sometimes my eyes light up when the typical elite universities come up, because they’re becoming a rarity of conversation
Agree.
Websites with college boards seem to be dominated by LAC marketers. Nothing wrong about reading the LAC hype, but readers miss out on the tremendous variety of offerings and options available at large universities--both public and private.
If interested in a particular major, visit the website of a Big Ten university and investigate the courses, programs, research opportunities, internship/externship opportunities, job placement, etc. You might be pleasantly surprised.
LAC folks just seem to have a lot of time on their hands and resort, unnecessarily, to making exaggerated and often false assertions.
Whether one prefers a small school or a big university, the key is to take advantage of the opportunities offered.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Daughter just graduated with a history major from a SLAC. She just started a job at cybersecurity company as a consultant. She interned with the company in DC last year. Not all interns received offers. Her ability to write was probably a very important factor.
Fascinating. SLAC again
No, nothing fascinating about a graduate of a small college landing a job--unless, of course, your job is to promote LACs.
If anything it reflects the forum’s interest. There’s a big UVA/W&M/LAC culture here. Sometimes my eyes light up when the typical elite universities come up, because they’re becoming a rarity of conversation
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Daughter just graduated with a history major from a SLAC. She just started a job at cybersecurity company as a consultant. She interned with the company in DC last year. Not all interns received offers. Her ability to write was probably a very important factor.
Fascinating. SLAC again
No, nothing fascinating about a graduate of a small college landing a job--unless, of course, your job is to promote LACs.
If anything it reflects the forum’s interest. There’s a big UVA/W&M/LAC culture here. Sometimes my eyes light up when the typical elite universities come up, because they’re becoming a rarity of conversation
That’s not the vibe I get. It’s very CS/tech/Ivy.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Daughter just graduated with a history major from a SLAC. She just started a job at cybersecurity company as a consultant. She interned with the company in DC last year. Not all interns received offers. Her ability to write was probably a very important factor.
Fascinating. SLAC again
No, nothing fascinating about a graduate of a small college landing a job--unless, of course, your job is to promote LACs.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Daughter just graduated with a history major from a SLAC. She just started a job at cybersecurity company as a consultant. She interned with the company in DC last year. Not all interns received offers. Her ability to write was probably a very important factor.
Fascinating. SLAC again
No, nothing fascinating about a graduate of a small college landing a job--unless, of course, your job is to promote LACs.
If anything it reflects the forum’s interest. There’s a big UVA/W&M/LAC culture here. Sometimes my eyes light up when the typical elite universities come up, because they’re becoming a rarity of conversation
Anonymous wrote:Some university parents seem shy. DC graduated this year from Harvard in econ and went straight into a think tank as a research associate, definitely wouldn't have been achievable without the alumni network.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Daughter just graduated with a history major from a SLAC. She just started a job at cybersecurity company as a consultant. She interned with the company in DC last year. Not all interns received offers. Her ability to write was probably a very important factor.
Fascinating. SLAC again
No, nothing fascinating about a graduate of a small college landing a job--unless, of course, your job is to promote LACs.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:T5 LAC, studied IR and already has an amazing apartment back here in DC!
You skipped over the job part
On the hill as a policy analyst
how does an entry level policy analyst get an "amazing" apt in DC? What is the salary?
Anonymous wrote:The CS folks should consider heading out to SF. My kid had multiple offers from AI companies…and says firms are poaching employees like crazy. ML background.
Also, surprisingly cheap to rent in SF proper…much cheaper than renting in Palo Alto or Mountain View (all the AI companies are in SF proper so not an issue).
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:T5 LAC, studied IR and already has an amazing apartment back here in DC!
You skipped over the job part
On the hill as a policy analyst