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Originally Posted by friendly fred
In the old days of the Ivy League, you had to prove you could do the work and pass the classes.
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Everyone is in on the game and knows what is going on but don't want to admit it and lose their Ivy League Privilege.
Fuck the Ivy League. They should triple the admissions and let people earn their grades like the kids had to do in the good old days.
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The key is getting accepted. At the top tier IVy league schools you have little chance getting in solely as a legacy. Harvard, Princeton and Yale it's extremely tough. Must be part of the top 1%
But look at it from an investment point of view: if you were paying 100K a year for an undergraduate degree wouldn't you want one that got you into the top law and medical school?
BTW, I worked in HR/IT for one of the biggest companies on the planet. They know what's going on.
Quote:
Originally Posted by SpeedRacerXXX
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.... But most would get straight A's at any college in the country, assuming they applied themselves.
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"assuming they applied themselves" is the key. We spoke with some Authur-Andersen folks whose research indicated high school grades were the best indicator of success. I know many students at A&M who got a full ride, tried, and lost their scholarship(s).
Quote:
Originally Posted by lustylad
...It all depends on what she majors in and what grades SHE makes of it. ..
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Her major is the key. Let's say she majors in a STEM field like ChemE, graduates with above a 3.5 from Brown, I'd say she's got a good chance of making $150K in 5 years. And Brown doesn't even have a good Eng college. The keys are STEM and being a woman.
Teaching, Music, Sociology majors make crap.
My mother's banker told me they were paying $44K A YEAR at TCU so their daughter could get a BA in Music. I fell out of my chair in laughter.