Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Grad schools know these schools and most LAC grads go to grad school. What matters is the education you receive.
How does SLAC online costing $50,000 per year fare against YouTube, or Coursera, or other free online courses out there? I mean, strictly in terms of education.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Grad schools know these schools and most LAC grads go to grad school. What matters is the education you receive.
How does SLAC online costing $50,000 per year fare against YouTube, or Coursera, or other free online courses out there? I mean, strictly in terms of education.
Anonymous wrote:Grad schools know these schools and most LAC grads go to grad school. What matters is the education you receive.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:95% of people don’t know Amherst or Williams, let alone “mid tier” so who cares? (Yes, I know people in DC do, but I’m talking about the real world).
People who matter probably do know of these schools.
How do you define “who matters”?
Exactly what you think it means. People with knowledge, power, and status.
Maybe people with knowledge, power, and status who live in the northeast, but there are lots of other people with that who live in the rest of the county who will have no idea. State schools will carry a lot more cache in these areas than LACs. No dig on LACs, it's just the way it is.
Exactly. My HS north of NYC sent people to the Williams, Amherst, Colby, etc. and they are excellent schools. If you want to work in Manhattan or DC, people have heard of them and know the rigor. But in the Midwest, nobody, except from a exclusive suburb will have heard of them.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:95% of people don’t know Amherst or Williams, let alone “mid tier” so who cares? (Yes, I know people in DC do, but I’m talking about the real world).
People who matter probably do know of these schools.
How do you define “who matters”?
Exactly what you think it means. People with knowledge, power, and status.
Maybe people with knowledge, power, and status who live in the northeast, but there are lots of other people with that who live in the rest of the county who will have no idea. State schools will carry a lot more cache in these areas than LACs. No dig on LACs, it's just the way it is.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:95% of people don’t know Amherst or Williams, let alone “mid tier” so who cares? (Yes, I know people in DC do, but I’m talking about the real world).
People who matter probably do know of these schools.
How do you define “who matters”?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:95% of people don’t know Amherst or Williams, let alone “mid tier” so who cares? (Yes, I know people in DC do, but I’m talking about the real world).
People who matter probably do know of these schools.
How do you define “who matters”?
Exactly what you think it means. People with knowledge, power, and status.
Maybe people with knowledge, power, and status who live in the northeast, but there are lots of other people with that who live in the rest of the county who will have no idea. State schools will carry a lot more cache in these areas than LACs. No dig on LACs, it's just the way it is.
Exactly. My HS north of NYC sent people to the Williams, Amherst, Colby, etc. and they are excellent schools. If you want to work in Manhattan or DC, people have heard of them and know the rigor. But in the Midwest, nobody, except from a exclusive suburb will have heard of them.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:95% of people don’t know Amherst or Williams, let alone “mid tier” so who cares? (Yes, I know people in DC do, but I’m talking about the real world).
People who matter probably do know of these schools.
How do you define “who matters”?
Exactly what you think it means. People with knowledge, power, and status.
Maybe people with knowledge, power, and status who live in the northeast, but there are lots of other people with that who live in the rest of the county who will have no idea. State schools will carry a lot more cache in these areas than LACs. No dig on LACs, it's just the way it is.
Exactly. My HS north of NYC sent people to the Williams, Amherst, Colby, etc. and they are excellent schools. If you want to work in Manhattan or DC, people have heard of them and know the rigor. But in the Midwest, nobody, except from a exclusive suburb will have heard of them.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:95% of people don’t know Amherst or Williams, let alone “mid tier” so who cares? (Yes, I know people in DC do, but I’m talking about the real world).
People who matter probably do know of these schools.
How do you define “who matters”?
Exactly what you think it means. People with knowledge, power, and status.
Maybe people with knowledge, power, and status who live in the northeast, but there are lots of other people with that who live in the rest of the county who will have no idea. State schools will carry a lot more cache in these areas than LACs. No dig on LACs, it's just the way it is.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:95% of people don’t know Amherst or Williams, let alone “mid tier” so who cares? (Yes, I know people in DC do, but I’m talking about the real world).
People who matter probably do know of these schools.
How do you define “who matters”?
Exactly what you think it means. People with knowledge, power, and status.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:95% of people don’t know Amherst or Williams, let alone “mid tier” so who cares? (Yes, I know people in DC do, but I’m talking about the real world).
People who matter probably do know of these schools.
How do you define “who matters”?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:95% of people don’t know Amherst or Williams, let alone “mid tier” so who cares? (Yes, I know people in DC do, but I’m talking about the real world).
People who matter probably do know of these schools.
How do you define “who matters”?