Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I will take this to the grave: K-12, especially 9-12, education matters 1000x more than which college you attend. ex.
Sidwell + UMich > public lifer + Ivy
Georgetown Prep + Villanova > public lifer + UChicago
Boarding school + UVA > public lifer + Duke
I've seen dozens of kids squander "elite" college because their crummy public school made them a fish out of water. And I've seen polished private school kids come out of public flagships and set the world on fire.
So be born rich, kids.
Anonymous wrote:Did you make friends and connections during college? Did you stay in touch with those people? If not, it doesn’t really matter once you are 5yrs out of school.
Where you go matters for connections and opportunities.
You can go to a prestigious school and fail recognize or to take advantage of ample opportunities. You can go to a mediocre school and bust your butt to find and take advantage of opportunities.
Anonymous wrote:I will take this to the grave: K-12, especially 9-12, education matters 1000x more than which college you attend. ex.
Sidwell + UMich > public lifer + Ivy
Georgetown Prep + Villanova > public lifer + UChicago
Boarding school + UVA > public lifer + Duke
I've seen dozens of kids squander "elite" college because their crummy public school made them a fish out of water. And I've seen polished private school kids come out of public flagships and set the world on fire.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I'm from the midwest and we would find if odd if a person lived here and went to an Ivy league school. Funny even. We all went to state schools, got jobs and no one cares.
But that's only if you want to stay in the Midwest. Plus the Ivy Leaguers generally don't come back, they stay on the East Coast.
Well, yeah. It's a regional thing. If you want to live in TX and work in a big city then a degree from UT, A&M, and more and more Texas Tech, are going to do just fine. Better maybe than a Harvard or Yale grad (undergrad) who will be perceived as snobby.
Same in the South where Vanderbilt and then all the big state schools are king.
Anonymous wrote:NO.
Unless -
1. You wanted to specifically be with a certain organization in the legal, medical or academic profession where the name of your education is paramount
2. You wanted to start in management v. work your way up in which case you go get your MBA from a top B school
3. You wanted to specifically open up networking opportunities at a school - ie you wanted specifically to work for a company that you know does college recruiting out of that school
4. You want to work within corporate finance or CIA/Foreign Service/public sector organization that college recruits specifically from a list of preferred top schools
Otherwise it does not matter where you go to college, from a community college to a college that nobody's heard of -
1. You can absolutely work your way to the top in almost any field.
2. You can absolutely be happy and successful in any industry.
3. You can absolutely earn a TON of money by being successful in your industry. Better yet, own your own business and hire people out of the college you want!
4. You can absolutely be a smart, good or educated person and even all three to boot!
- Signed, a VP of Talent Acquisition, with 20+ years of experience hiring in tech, finance and sales/marketing industries for corporate F100 global and national companies. I have recruited both Harvard MBA morons who despite whatever title they had will always be moron and can't write a resume, and highly motivated, street smart and hard worker community college grads who became C level executives
Anonymous wrote:Didn’t Colin Jost attend Harvard while Michael Che grew up in the projects in N.Y.?
And they both have the same exact jobs. 🤣
Anonymous wrote:NO.
Unless -
1. You wanted to specifically be with a certain organization in the legal, medical or academic profession where the name of your education is paramount
2. You wanted to start in management v. work your way up in which case you go get your MBA from a top B school
3. You wanted to specifically open up networking opportunities at a school - ie you wanted specifically to work for a company that you know does college recruiting out of that school
4. You want to work within corporate finance or CIA/Foreign Service/public sector organization that college recruits specifically from a list of preferred top schools
Otherwise it does not matter where you go to college, from a community college to a college that nobody's heard of -
1. You can absolutely work your way to the top in almost any field.
2. You can absolutely be happy and successful in any industry.
3. You can absolutely earn a TON of money by being successful in your industry. Better yet, own your own business and hire people out of the college you want!
4. You can absolutely be a smart, good or educated person and even all three to boot!
- Signed, a VP of Talent Acquisition, with 20+ years of experience hiring in tech, finance and sales/marketing industries for corporate F100 global and national companies. I have recruited both Harvard MBA morons who despite whatever title they had will always be moron and can't write a resume, and highly motivated, street smart and hard worker community college grads who became C level executives
Anonymous wrote:Yes, it absolutely matters. It follows you for your whole life.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I will take this to the grave: K-12, especially 9-12, education matters 1000x more than which college you attend. ex.
Sidwell + UMich > public lifer + Ivy
Georgetown Prep + Villanova > public lifer + UChicago
Boarding school + UVA > public lifer + Duke
I've seen dozens of kids squander "elite" college because their crummy public school made them a fish out of water. And I've seen polished private school kids come out of public flagships and set the world on fire.
So be born rich, kids.
Anonymous wrote:I will take this to the grave: K-12, especially 9-12, education matters 1000x more than which college you attend. ex.
Sidwell + UMich > public lifer + Ivy
Georgetown Prep + Villanova > public lifer + UChicago
Boarding school + UVA > public lifer + Duke
I've seen dozens of kids squander "elite" college because their crummy public school made them a fish out of water. And I've seen polished private school kids come out of public flagships and set the world on fire.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Matter? No. Help? Yes.
Some of the top schools alumni associations are amazing at helping grads find their first jobs. It also does give you the edge if applying to medical, dental, law or graduate school.
+1. Dartmouth and University of Notre Dame grads here. Huge boost in getting into Harvard med (where we met) and various professional organizations with other undergrad alum.