Anonymous wrote:Law. Where you went to law school will follow you around, every single day from 25 to 105. On the plus side, lawyers don't care that much about undergrad.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:^ I've met almost no Ivy League-educated accountants.
There's no accounting major at most of those schools.
There aren't business majors at most Ivy League schools. So what?
Big Consulting Firms and Investment Banks often hire graduates from Ivies , Stanford, and Williams and Amherst, who major in math, history or economics rather than business majors from good large universities. This is based somewhat on the notion that they prefer someone with a better overall education ( which the cannot replicate) and can teach them the business skills they need to know. But part of it is the power of alumni bias and class prejudice.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:^ I've met almost no Ivy League-educated accountants.
There's no accounting major at most of those schools.
There aren't business majors at most Ivy League schools. So what?
Big Consulting Firms and Investment Banks often hire graduates from Ivies , Stanford, and Williams and Amherst, who major in math, history or economics rather than business majors from good large universities. This is based somewhat on the notion that they prefer someone with a better overall education ( which the cannot replicate) and can teach them the business skills they need to know. But part of it is the power of alumni bias and class prejudice.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:^ I've met almost no Ivy League-educated accountants.
There's no accounting major at most of those schools.
There aren't business majors at most Ivy League schools. So what?