Anonymous wrote:I went to a school with a 96% admit rate. I have a person on my team that went to Harvard. Bet their parents kick themselves daily.
Anonymous wrote:What is point of living a life if we all end up in graves?
Anonymous wrote:Seems to depend on what you want to study and your value system.
I’m in medicine and literally does not matter what school. Many colleagues who went to Ivy for undergrad didn’t like their experience. Maybe ivy is good for careers PP posted- consulting, banking, PE, Wall Street)
For my super high stats kid, I still stress fit and vibe and opportunities for their interests.
For my above avg kid, I won’t make them kill themselves in HS. This is life too. Life is not just in the future.
Anonymous wrote:Your alumni network is different. Your potential pool of SOs/life partners is different. Your enjoyment of the learning may be different.
Anonymous wrote:Seems to depend on what you want to study and your value system.
I’m in medicine and literally does not matter what school. Many colleagues who went to Ivy for undergrad didn’t like their experience. Maybe ivy is good for careers PP posted- consulting, banking, PE, Wall Street)
For my super high stats kid, I still stress fit and vibe and opportunities for their interests.
For my above avg kid, I won’t make them kill themselves in HS. This is life too. Life is not just in the future.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I went to a school with a 96% admit rate. I have a person on my team that went to Harvard. Bet their parents kick themselves daily.
If both of you were laid off tomorrow, whose alumni network is more likely to be useful?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It doesn’t matter.
Maybe if you’re going for a Wall Street job it will be easier. Or top-tier consulting. That’s about it.
If you want to go to law school or medical school go to the easiest school we’re getting the best grades as possible.
I say this with two kids at T15.
+1. Grad school matters more for everything. I went to a large midwest state flagship, followed by another state flagship for MS, followed by another not prestigious school for PhD. My PhD was sponsored by NASA and I partnered with Stanford. Now I work along side grads from Princeton, Wharton, MIT, Harvard, Oxford, Cambridge, and so many other named and no name places. After 5 years it's all about the social skills. Don't get me wrong you have to be smart enough, and if you want to rise you have to be socially savvy too. The ones that get the furthest are usually just the most determined and more willing to sacrifice health and personal life for the job.
Anonymous wrote:I went to a school with a 96% admit rate. I have a person on my team that went to Harvard. Bet their parents kick themselves daily.
Anonymous wrote:I went to a school with a 96% admit rate. I have a person on my team that went to Harvard. Bet their parents kick themselves daily.
Anonymous wrote:OP, I was thinking about this lately too. A family we’ve known since elementary pushed their kid in a certain sport, unabashedly for college admissions. They sold the family business, sold their house for a loss, moved to a much smaller place in a less competitive area to redshirt the kid before high school and go all in for this kid’s sport. The dad even got himself hired as a coach at the HS to be in all the practices lol. But they did it! Kid is a recruited athlete. Was it worth all that sacrifice to land at ivy? Although the sport isn’t really one people do professionally, I think they are playing the long game for the types of things PPs are mentioning here - access to power, enhanced opportunities and dating pool, starting a legacy, etc.
Anonymous wrote:I am not a troll. I’m the parent of a HS sophomore who is killing themselves excelling in school and participating in extracurriculars to be competitive for T20.
At the same time, I see parents on here posting how their kid went to Cornell and ended up in the same place as someone who went to Pitt or another similarly ranked school.
At the same time, in my job I work alongside people who have gone to ivies and schools I’ve never heard of. I went to Michigan, btw.
My sister did her undergraduate at Oxford, stayed in the UK and is now partner at a well respected consulting firm alongside other partners that went to no name schools from India.
So seeing the stress my kid goes through, I am honestly asking what is the point of a Yale or Princeton if they take you to the same place that a school like Rutgers and Radford can take you?!