Anonymous wrote:This is a weird post. What is your point?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Doesn’t the experience itself count more? Why is your education defined by job/career outcomes?
Yes, so many people are missing the intrinsic value of a capella groups, bad weather, squash, & horrendous football.
If you don’t know, then you don’t know…
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Doesn’t the experience itself count more? Why is your education defined by job/career outcomes?
Yes, so many people are missing the intrinsic value of a capella groups, bad weather, squash, & horrendous football.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I went to Yale and deliberately became a high school teacher. On purpose because I wanted to. Yale was fun and I got a good education. And, I got a really fantastic husband. 10 out of 10. Would recommend.
We have a lot of teachers in the Boston area from Harvard. My son had a special ed teacher in elementary school who graduated from Harvard and he was a saint. Brilliant, patient, dedicated, all around amazing. He was made for the job. He made a huge difference in my son’s life and made school a little more bearable for him.
Anonymous wrote:I went to Yale and deliberately became a high school teacher. On purpose because I wanted to. Yale was fun and I got a good education. And, I got a really fantastic husband. 10 out of 10. Would recommend.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Doesn’t the experience itself count more? Why is your education defined by job/career outcomes?
Yes, so many people are missing the intrinsic value of a capella groups, bad weather, squash, & horrendous football.
Anonymous wrote:You need to move on from your jealousy OP. My kid went to Princeton and graduated with an English Degree. Millionaire by age 30.
Anonymous wrote:There was a study years ago that found that most Ivy grads have the same jobs as non-Ivy grads.
My takeaway was that Ivies are worth it if you want to go into a high earning field, but not worth student loans if you're aiming for a regular job. Of course if you get FA then it's worth it regardless of career plans.
Anonymous wrote:I have met multiple ivy degree holders working jobs in high school education, middling research depts, "self employed" scrapping by. Sure there are some high profile ivy leaguers but in the end many end up in same jobs as middling t200 degree holders.
Anonymous wrote:Whatever you need to tell yourself.
Anonymous wrote:Doesn’t the experience itself count more? Why is your education defined by job/career outcomes?