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.
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:A good friend was like this and spent a year working as a camp counselor at a sleepaway camp and then ski patrol in Colorado. He just really wasn’t sure what to do. Ended up doing a post bac yo get pre med classes and went to med school 2 years after graduation. He now does emergency medicine out west and skis when he’s not working. Seems like a nice life.
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.
Is this 1991?
Yeah when I graduated in 1992 a lot didn’t have jobs but it was a recession. I did internships every summer and had a job within a few months.
+1 I graduated in '92 around when the recession hit. Even my low rated no name state u had local internships that paid but weren't glamorous jobs. They were boring office jobs, but I wanted the experience and the pay. That internship resulted in my first job right out of college - $26K.
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.
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.
Oh, and yes, it's a huuuuuge red flag.
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?
Anonymous wrote:He also blamed lack of summer internships on Covid, so his resume has practically nothing on it. Is it truly this difficult to land an offer in this uncertain economy, especially this late in the school year, or is he lying to us? Or is he nearly vacant resume as a graduating senior a huge red flag? He said he has submitted his resume to dozens of posts on the college's online job portal but he never gets responses. I have no way of verifying this.