Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What's the point?
To secure a high-status job in a top tier city, a quality social circle, and a smart & rich spouse who you can produce bright offspring with.
This - DCUM is really good for providing the unvarnished truth unlike good-for-nothing 'guidance counselors' in 99% of schools who have no idea how the world works.
Tyler Cowen's - average is over, the actuality of class structure growing and ossifying in the US, hyper global competition all provide 'the point'.
If OP's daughter can't logically 'get' this, she has no business being at a top school.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Your daughter is correct.
There is no point to an elite college.... Unless your intention is to have rich friends.
The point to life is to be a good person, have good friends, be kind to strangers, give back to your community and (hopefully) have a close family.
A surgeon from Penn is no happier than a plumber, if you can afford a house, food, have close friends.
Once you have a certain amount of money, happiness does not increase with more money and eventually declines.
dcum's love to laud plumbers and blue collar trades without actually being blue collar themselves. there's a reason why blue collar moms and dads also push their kids to college. blue collar people (god bless them) pay with their bodies at age 50+.
+1000.
I grew up in a blue collar family and have lots of family/friends who work in trades. There is a difference between blue collar work in which you work for a large company (like at a steel mill) and a trade in which you are self-employed (like a plumber or electrician).
My friends/relatives who work in trades self-employed are doing well. Their skills are in demand and always will be. They aren't at the whim and fancy of CEOs and union bosses who don't necessarily have their best interests in mind.
Many people who work self-employed at trades reach a point by age 50 in which they have enough business to support hiring people to work for them to do the more physical work. They are much better positioned than white-collar workers at 50 who face getting replaced by younger professionals who are willing to work 60 hour weeks for half the pay.
If I had a child who seemed to have a knack for trades, I would encourage them to go into that field. They can still go to college, but I would want them to get certified in their trade as well.
Heading into the future, the people with hard skills (in trades) will have far more options and mobility than white collar workers in the rat race.
I'd still encourage college, but I wouldn't emphasize an Ivy or even an expensive school. The best path a high school senior could take right now to position himself or herself well for the future is to get a bachelor's from a less expensive school coupled with a trade. Even going to community college for two years and taking classes in a trade (in order to get a certification) and then going nights at a state school to finish for a BA is a good path.
I think that the current employment climate favors certifications over degrees.
Anonymous wrote:And if you doubt that, read this piece on college students, stress and blackout drinking from the NYTimes today: http://www.nytimes.com/2016/09/19/opinion/drinking-to-blackout.html?action=click&pgtype=Homepage&clickSource=story-heading&module=opinion-c-col-right-region®ion=opinion-c-col-right-region&WT.nav=opinion-c-col-right-region&_r=0
It's scary what we think is OK to put our children through to avoid being what DCUM calls "average" (which is actually incredibly successful compared to the vast majority of the world).
Such a load of bullshit.
Anonymous wrote:Tell your daughter to check her privilege. "What's the point [of trying hard]" is only something a rich brat with daddy's money can confidently say.
Anonymous wrote:What's the point?
To secure a high-status job in a top tier city, a quality social circle, and a smart & rich spouse who you can produce bright offspring with.
Anonymous wrote:Tell your daughter to check her privilege. "What's the point [of trying hard]" is only something a rich brat with daddy's money can confidently say.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote: Are you seriously trying to tell me that if your kid was torn between a school like Yale and one more like UMD you'd advise UMD???? For what reason? Money and the desire a lucrative profession aside, students obviously receive a WORLD CLASS education at Yale. Not so UMD.
Yale grad here. Go to Yale for the prestige, connections and future opportunities, absolutely, but don't think that undergraduates there are getting a "world class" education. Much like UMD (or any other large university), the majority of classes are lectures by professors (which these days anyone can see online), and discussion sections taught by grad students. For a truly great education where you really interact with faculty, get mentoring, have real research opportunities as an undergrad, etc. go to a liberal arts college. Or go to UMD (if in-state), and get a similar education to Yale and pay 1/5 the tuition.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:"The point is that I'm not going to be your lifetime beneficiary so if you want food to eat clothes to wear and a roof over your head when you hit 18 then it's in your best interest to put yourself in a position to attain those things."
LMFAO. You realize that 70% of adults in the US don't even have a bachelor's degree or higher, much less one from a top 10 school? That is probably less than 1% of the population in the US. You really think that 99% of people over the age of 18 don't have food to eat, clothes to wear, or a roof over their head?
I'm not concerned with the 70% of flyover trash, Walmart employees, etc. I personally don't know any adults without a bachelors. DMV is the wealthiest and most educated region in the USA. The bar here is higher.
http://www.governing.com/blogs/by-the-numbers/graduate-professional-degrees-for-metro-areas.html
The majority of over-25 adults in the Washington DC metro area do not have bachelor's degrees.
Again, do you move in those circles - Walmart employees, fast food workers, street cleaners? Do you do happy hour with the janitors from your office? Stop injecting data from low people into a high-SES conversation.