Anonymous wrote:I believe that an recent immigrant or first generation family may genuinely believe that prestige matters because it's consistent with the overall "brand" of the American dream. However, it's simply incorrect. Upward mobility comes from a bit of educational success and a lot of professional and financial success. To echo the points of others, plenty of Ivy grads are sitting at desks and roaming in Target aisles next to folks who went to a perfectly mid-ranked state school. The key is what you learn, what opportunities you seize and what you do after school to build the foundation for your family.
I understand that this rocks the cliche assumption that East and South Asian families "demand" top education, but ultimately they would be better served focusing their finances and energy in other areas.
Anonymous wrote:
I am betting though that OP, the non immigrant POC lawyer, still has the bamboo ceiling and model minority bias to deal with, from their white elite Ivy league educated colleagues. But you still insist it doesn’t matter which college they attend.
Anonymous wrote:Not sure why the focus on medicine, but students get into top medical schools from public universities all them time. Many of the top medical schools ARE at the very same schools.
Anonymous wrote:I think it’s true for a lot of people.
Some people have a good enough network that it doesn’t matter at all. They might not be wealthy but they know enough people to get their kid in the door where they need to go. Sure, the kid still needs a degree, but it doesn’t matter if it’s from Dartmouth or North Dakota state.
Then there are people who can’t get mom or dad to call their buddies to pull strings for an internship or an interview.
The older I get the more I realize life is a popularity contest.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Of course it matters. You go to these schools for the connections and peer group. Rich people
https://nyti.ms/3PxRhVD
Mark Zuckerberg’s college roommate was offered the chance to co-found Facebook and he said NO. His dad didn’t want him to drop out of Harvard.
When that call comes home to you, are you saying drop out and start the company or stay at Harvard?
He wound up with a good job, but not billions of dollars and global-level success.
He had exactly the right connection at the exact right time. But he had to take a huge risk to capitalize on it.
Are you encouraging your kid to take that risk?
Anonymous wrote:“Reread and try to put your self in the shoes of a POC immigrant lawyer, trying to make it in corporate America. “
But OP is not an immigrant. Parents were immigrants. So their kid that is applying now has Grandparents that are immigrants and parents that are American born lawyers for goodness sakes.