Anonymous wrote:This was my DSs top choice but the rep at tonight’s private school fair was horrible. Couldn’t carry on a conversation. DS plans not to ED anymore. Too bad, he was high stats and full pay. Before the trolls come out; this is a true story.
Anonymous wrote:This was my DSs top choice but the rep at tonight’s private school fair was horrible. Couldn’t carry on a conversation. DS plans not to ED anymore. Too bad, he was high stats and full pay. Before the trolls come out; this is a true story.
Anonymous wrote:This was my DSs top choice but the rep at tonight’s private school fair was horrible. Couldn’t carry on a conversation. DS plans not to ED anymore. Too bad, he was high stats and full pay. Before the trolls come out; this is a true story.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This was my DSs top choice but the rep at tonight’s private school fair was horrible. Couldn’t carry on a conversation. DS plans not to ED anymore. Too bad, he was high stats and full pay. Before the trolls come out; this is a true story.
Have you visited? Don’t let one bad reps bad night dissuade you from what you want.
Yes ma’am; twice. We were trying to build a bond with her. She wouldn’t have it.
Anonymous wrote:^ Wow.I was defending Middlebury on here until I saw that.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This was my DSs top choice but the rep at tonight’s private school fair was horrible. Couldn’t carry on a conversation. DS plans not to ED anymore. Too bad, he was high stats and full pay. Before the trolls come out; this is a true story.
Have you visited? Don’t let one bad reps bad night dissuade you from what you want.
Anonymous wrote:This was my DSs top choice but the rep at tonight’s private school fair was horrible. Couldn’t carry on a conversation. DS plans not to ED anymore. Too bad, he was high stats and full pay. Before the trolls come out; this is a true story.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I love how everyone is like
"It is a great school!"
But the median salary 12 years after college is $62K a year.
Um, no. You don't pay full pay for a college like that. How is this even a question.
Because not everyone is so concerned with ROI, but rather the quality of education the kid receives. Some get this, some don't.
You mean privileged white people?
I'm the one who wrote the bolded. Not privileged (maybe we need to define that?) but I have the old fashioned belief that the purpose of going to college is to get a good education. DC wants to major in Classics. Fine, the return on investment is going to be poor I'm sure, but I'm not going to
refuse to pay because of that choice.
Yeah, I think you do need a definition on privilege. 99% of the country can't afford to just sent their kid to $70K a year school for an education, let alone be in a position to just let their kid go wherever they want, pick whatever degree seems fun, and basically do whatever they want with Mommy and Daddy's money. And then there are people who actually can afford it and laugh at a teen who says they want them to spend $300K to major in classics. They are the ones who won't let their kids inherit a dime, unless they make something of themselves. You know, accountability, independence, etc...
And then there’s us just laughing at how angry and stupid you are. It’s hilarious.
Agree. The “check your privilege” poster is ridiculous. Do you feel the same way about Classics majors at HYP? What about Black Studies or Women’s Studies majors? I don’t see the high paying career path with those majors?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:A friend's child is majoring in classics and will probably go to grad school for something like computational linguistics. Believe it or not, people who write translation software actually benefit from knowing other languages, and knowing a lot about various issues with grammar, etc.
As a poster upthread said, while some people believe you should major in pharmaceutical repping and become a pharmaceutical rep, there are actually many liberal arts majors that are useful background for going on in a vareity of fields. For example, some people who now do intellectual property rights law actually majored in philosophy, where there is a lot of writing about ownership and how one claims ownership and what it means to own something, etc.
Yet the average salary is low $60’s for Middleburry alum over 10 years out. Many of which probably afforded and went on for a graduate degree too. So....
You need to read the caveats to the data and understand what its measuring. Earnings data by college was release by Obama era Department of ED through the College Scorecard by cross-walking federal aid recipients with IRS data. The reported "salary after attending" Middlebury College was $58,200. Available here: https://collegescorecard.ed.gov/school/?230959-Middlebury-College
Please note data flag reads "The median earnings of former students who received federal financial aid, at 10 years after entering school."
So a number of things. First it excludes so-called "full freight" students who didnt get a Pell Grant or take out federal student loans, or whose parents took out a low-interest bank loan available to them bc of their good credit and family assets ie the data excludes wealthier students who probably went on to higher paying jobs due to their family connectiosn and wealth.
Second, the reported figure is "median" not average. The average would likely be higher in this context because outlier high salary earners would skew it up where as outlier lower earnings students have a stopping point at zero.
Last, and perhaps most important, it measures student earnings "10 years after entering," not 10 years after graduating. This figure is their salary at age 28. I dont know aobut you but I attended an Ivy league college and my earnings at age 28 were around $50 - 60K and I was delighted. The majority of people in the workforce dont start earning larger salaries until later in their career and people who pursue lengthy graduate programs typical of Middlebury students are likely not earning or earning fellowship $ at age 28.
I just dont think you can make broad assumptions about the success of Middlebury alums based on that stat.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I love how everyone is like
"It is a great school!"
But the median salary 12 years after college is $62K a year.
Um, no. You don't pay full pay for a college like that. How is this even a question.
Because not everyone is so concerned with ROI, but rather the quality of education the kid receives. Some get this, some don't.
You mean privileged white people?
I'm the one who wrote the bolded. Not privileged (maybe we need to define that?) but I have the old fashioned belief that the purpose of going to college is to get a good education. DC wants to major in Classics. Fine, the return on investment is going to be poor I'm sure, but I'm not going to
refuse to pay because of that choice.
Yeah, I think you do need a definition on privilege. 99% of the country can't afford to just sent their kid to $70K a year school for an education, let alone be in a position to just let their kid go wherever they want, pick whatever degree seems fun, and basically do whatever they want with Mommy and Daddy's money. And then there are people who actually can afford it and laugh at a teen who says they want them to spend $300K to major in classics. They are the ones who won't let their kids inherit a dime, unless they make something of themselves. You know, accountability, independence, etc...
And then there’s us just laughing at how angry and stupid you are. It’s hilarious.
Anonymous wrote:Safety valve school for wealthy whites when they are rejected by better places. That’s the bottom line.
Anonymous wrote:Safety valve school for wealthy whites when they are rejected by better places. That’s the bottom line.