Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I’ll bite.
And will use this thread as an example.
I saw title and looked forward to reading it this quiet morning.
It is not an engaging discussion regarding the merits of differing educational models.
It has a derogatory, judgmental tone dare I say ignorant. For my kids, I want them to develop an open mind to discuss things they don’t understand - not close minded and derogatory in attacking things they don’t.
I have 3 kids - one in a SLAC mentioned in this thread, one at a State Flagship, and one applying this year.
My DS at the SLAC has benefited from a small, tight knit college environment. It is the right environment for him. And he a legitimate interest in learning, is very aware of world affairs, the political environment, and some of the underlying causes. He spends his time reading. He is growing into an informed young adult.
He is not primarily focused on securing employment. He has spend four years learning. And throughout history that has been the true luxury of the wealthy. And he gets it.
My DD at a state university is potentially pre-med. it’s a large school. Digesting material - not for the sake of learning - but to get through it while ensuring she maintains her 4.0. The goal is not an education - the education is a means to the end - med school admission. The level of intellectual curiosity is clearly different. Career paths are more pragmatic. Engineering, nursing, business. Grinding to get a degree to get employment. I realize that these students exist at a SLACs and there are gunners everywhere. And ironically I think the competition at the flagship is greater because the student body doesn’t have the luxury of assuming life is opportunity rich. But you can feel the difference. For my DD the flagship is the right environment - it fits her personality. But for my other two children, the SLACs are the way to go.
That all said I would say that the reason DCUM folks are obsessed with SLACs is that it is inherently a luxury product - high touch education - while socially signialling to peers, employers, etc. Want to go into Investment banking, Williams, Middlebury, Amherst are goin to signal that you went to the right day school an$ have the right family connections. U Pitt, Penn State, UVA, etc.not so much.
And last yes the SLACs like Denison, Hobart, etc.were historically were the gentlemen ‘c’ students went from prep school. They would not have survived at the flagships so their parents had the money to send them to a nurturing environment.
But that all said, folks are obsessed with SLACs because they are from a SES that understands the value.
Agree this is a good post, and I’ll add another thought to the mix. Both my kids had the luxury prep school experience. My oldest wanted something entirely different for college and is at a huge school. She finds the less-precious student body refreshing and has benefited from having to make her own way and fend for herself. I might not have chosen that for her (and I did in fact encourage her to apply to SLACs.) But she chose well for herself. My younger child is graduating this year and also didn’t choose the SLAC I might have preferred—his choice is a mid sized university...and we’re hoping he’ll find the best of both worlds there. Time will tell.
Anonymous wrote:I’ll bite.
And will use this thread as an example.
I saw title and looked forward to reading it this quiet morning.
It is not an engaging discussion regarding the merits of differing educational models.
It has a derogatory, judgmental tone dare I say ignorant. For my kids, I want them to develop an open mind to discuss things they don’t understand - not close minded and derogatory in attacking things they don’t.
I have 3 kids - one in a SLAC mentioned in this thread, one at a State Flagship, and one applying this year.
My DS at the SLAC has benefited from a small, tight knit college environment. It is the right environment for him. And he a legitimate interest in learning, is very aware of world affairs, the political environment, and some of the underlying causes. He spends his time reading. He is growing into an informed young adult.
He is not primarily focused on securing employment. He has spend four years learning. And throughout history that has been the true luxury of the wealthy. And he gets it.
My DD at a state university is potentially pre-med. it’s a large school. Digesting material - not for the sake of learning - but to get through it while ensuring she maintains her 4.0. The goal is not an education - the education is a means to the end - med school admission. The level of intellectual curiosity is clearly different. Career paths are more pragmatic. Engineering, nursing, business. Grinding to get a degree to get employment. I realize that these students exist at a SLACs and there are gunners everywhere. And ironically I think the competition at the flagship is greater because the student body doesn’t have the luxury of assuming life is opportunity rich. But you can feel the difference. For my DD the flagship is the right environment - it fits her personality. But for my other two children, the SLACs are the way to go.
That all said I would say that the reason DCUM folks are obsessed with SLACs is that it is inherently a luxury product - high touch education - while socially signialling to peers, employers, etc. Want to go into Investment banking, Williams, Middlebury, Amherst are goin to signal that you went to the right day school an$ have the right family connections. U Pitt, Penn State, UVA, etc.not so much.
And last yes the SLACs like Denison, Hobart, etc.were historically were the gentlemen ‘c’ students went from prep school. They would not have survived at the flagships so their parents had the money to send them to a nurturing environment.
But that all said, folks are obsessed with SLACs because they are from a SES that understands the value.
Anonymous wrote:Question for 11:40
Isn’t SLAC better for potential medical school students because of small classes and easier access to professors.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The earnings in that link don't look dismal. What are you seeing?
OP here, Grinnell’s average salary ten years out from graduation is around $77K which is quite concerning. Same thing with Skidmore and other selective, but not too selective, LACs.
Stop right there.
You are massively misinterpreting the $77k data point.
How about Yale grads 10 years out? $83k. Princeton? $80k. CalTech? $74k. UChicago? $65k.
Averages include students who are still medical residents, PhD candidates, postdocs, etc. 10 years after graduation. You absolutely cannot criticize Grinnell and Skidmore for this unless you’re also criticizing Yale and Princeton.
https://www.cnbc.com/2017/12/06/how-much-alums-of-americas-top-colleges-earn-10-years-later.html
You’re comparing two different charts though. If you just use the WSJ chart, the $77 Grinnell number corresponds to at least a mid $120 for Yale and Princeton. It doesn’t make sense to compare across two different reports.
Anonymous wrote:Because there are a lot of people who can't cut it in engineering, math and the hard sciences. They can type lots of paragraphs about why a SLAC education is superior though, lol.
Anonymous wrote:Because there are a lot of people who can't cut it in engineering, math and the hard sciences. They can type lots of paragraphs about why a SLAC education is superior though, lol.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Because there are a lot of people who can't cut it in engineering, math and the hard sciences. They can type lots of paragraphs about why a SLAC education is superior though, lol.
Math and science are among the liberal arts. The fact you don’t know that shows how limited your understanding is.
Anonymous wrote:Because there are a lot of people who can't cut it in engineering, math and the hard sciences. They can type lots of paragraphs about why a SLAC education is superior though, lol.
Anonymous wrote:Because there are a lot of people who can't cut it in engineering, math and the hard sciences. They can type lots of paragraphs about why a SLAC education is superior though, lol.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The only ones “obsessed” with the LACs are those that will only pay for public school education. Why do you need justification? I don’t care what kind of car you purchase or where you go on vacation. No one cares where young Larlo attends college either. Move on.
Exactly.
The ones obsessed with putting down LACs are the ones that did not attend them.
Opposite. I did not and think they sound amazing!
Anonymous wrote:The focus on LACs is misplaced if you are looking at career earnings and ROI. Size per se is not a major factor. Harvey Mudd has 900 undergraduates but has a 40 year NPV (income - cost with time factored in) of $1.851M. That is higher than Penn, Yale, Columbia, Duke, Princeton, Cornell, Dartmouth, Brown, etc.
What matters most through near to mid-term in particular is choice of major. Engineering majors in particular earn more than the average major during this period. (Over their entire career, engineers make over 1.5X as much as the average and it can be higher depending on on specialty See chart in https://www.businessinsider.com/college-majors-biggest-lifetime-earnings-2014-9 .) Harvey Mudd has a very high percentage of STEM majors.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I’ll bite.
And will use this thread as an example.
I saw title and looked forward to reading it this quiet morning.
It is not an engaging discussion regarding the merits of differing educational models.
It has a derogatory, judgmental tone dare I say ignorant. For my kids, I want them to develop an open mind to discuss things they don’t understand - not close minded and derogatory in attacking things they don’t.
I have 3 kids - one in a SLAC mentioned in this thread, one at a State Flagship, and one applying this year.
My DS at the SLAC has benefited from a small, tight knit college environment. It is the right environment for him. And he a legitimate interest in learning, is very aware of world affairs, the political environment, and some of the underlying causes. He spends his time reading. He is growing into an informed young adult.
He is not primarily focused on securing employment. He has spend four years learning. And throughout history that has been the true luxury of the wealthy. And he gets it.
My DD at a state university is potentially pre-med. it’s a large school. Digesting material - not for the sake of learning - but to get through it while ensuring she maintains her 4.0. The goal is not an education - the education is a means to the end - med school admission. The level of intellectual curiosity is clearly different. Career paths are more pragmatic. Engineering, nursing, business. Grinding to get a degree to get employment. I realize that these students exist at a SLACs and there are gunners everywhere. And ironically I think the competition at the flagship is greater because the student body doesn’t have the luxury of assuming life is opportunity rich. But you can feel the difference. For my DD the flagship is the right environment - it fits her personality. But for my other two children, the SLACs are the way to go.
That all said I would say that the reason DCUM folks are obsessed with SLACs is that it is inherently a luxury product - high touch education - while socially signialling to peers, employers, etc. Want to go into Investment banking, Williams, Middlebury, Amherst are goin to signal that you went to the right day school an$ have the right family connections. U Pitt, Penn State, UVA, etc.not so much.
And last yes the SLACs like Denison, Hobart, etc.were historically were the gentlemen ‘c’ students went from prep school. They would not have survived at the flagships so their parents had the money to send them to a nurturing environment.
But that all said, folks are obsessed with SLACs because they are from a SES that understands the value.
OP here, thank you for this write-up. Makes sense. But then my question would be: why do typical “upper-middle” class folks (i.e. mom is a lawyer, dad is an MD) send their kids to these SLACs? Because then the parents probably don’t have the connections to secure a decent job for their kids after graduation (since most UMC folks are in merit-based careers) and their kids probably aren’t well-connected enough to get into banking? Also just an FYI: I wasn’t referring to the Amherst or Williams of the SLAC world when I started this thread. More like the Denisons and Hobarts. And ironic you mention UVA and Penn State as bad for investment banking, as they both place pretty well in that field (no, for the record, I have no connection to either school)
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The only ones “obsessed” with the LACs are those that will only pay for public school education. Why do you need justification? I don’t care what kind of car you purchase or where you go on vacation. No one cares where young Larlo attends college either. Move on.
Exactly.
The ones obsessed with putting down LACs are the ones that did not attend them.