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16-year-old with 3 associate degrees gets perfect SAT score


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2014 Jul 3, 1:20am   10,916 views  73 comments

by Rin   ➕follow (11)   💰tip   ignore  

http://news.yahoo.com/16-year-old-with-three-college-degrees-gets-perfect-sat-score-180943729.html

Excerpt: "Maadhav Shah is only 16 years old, but he already holds three associate's degrees and recently scored a perfect 2400 on the SAT. As the Bobs from "Office Space" would say, this young man has upper management written all over him.

[ snip ]

Despite possessing college degrees, Maadhav is still working on graduating from Granite Bay High School. He'll be a senior this fall. He said he hopes to study engineering at Stanford or Cal Tech."

Ok, with the above stated, how many will guess that someone else, in upper management, will steal his ideas, if he's got any to start with?

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31   Rin   2014 Jul 3, 12:57pm  

HydroCabron says

I know several people who nailed exams, went to Caltech, and are not setting the world on fire by any means. I also know one guy who had perfect SATs and 5s on 12 AP exams who nearly dropped out of college.

Well, no one needs to set the world of fire, however, ppl do need to be able to follow their creativity and passions.

What academics and others preach is that simply logging the hours, doing homeworks, getting A's, publishing papers, yada, yada, means that in the end, there's a pot of gold waiting where the rainbow ends.

This is the common lie, which folks like Marcus and others, believe.

The truth is that today, I'm making a ton of money, being a salesman for a hedge fund. Being a BS artist is not my passion in life and this isn't what I originally wanted to do but it's necessary, to get out with a bronze parachute, to do what I really want with my life.

32   HydroCabron   2014 Jul 3, 1:01pm  

Rin says

What academics and others preach is that simply logging the hours, doing homeworks, getting A's, publishing papers, yada, yada, means that in the end, there's a pot of gold waiting where the rainbow ends.

I try to cut professors some slack, because few have worked more than 2-3 years in the real world, and I believe it takes about 5 for the brainwashing of academe to fade away. Academe selects for people who never worked outside it, and never paid much attention to the real world, other than to feel superior to it.

I am still amazed by how different the culture and values of the outside world are from what surrounded me when I was in school. The difference is so stark that I wonder if sending kids to elite/selective liberal arts, Ivies, or MIT/Caltech/Harvey Mudd sorts of places is very bad for them. I am dead serious.

33   Rin   2014 Jul 3, 1:07pm  

HydroCabron says

I am still amazed by how different the culture and values of the outside world are from what surrounded me when I was in school. The difference is so stark that I wonder if sending kids to elite/selective liberal arts, Ivies, or MIT/Caltech/Harvey Mudd sorts of places is very bad for them. I am dead serious.

In all honesty, the purpose of those schools is to help students get recruited by management consulting or financial firms, nothing else. Thus, those elite firms, like McKinsey, can tell the world that they recruit from the 'best American universities'. Otherwise, they don't offer much value.

34   Rin   2014 Jul 4, 1:22am  

Where ppl like Marcus and others often get it wrong is that they confuse the submission of a homework assignment and then getting feedback like 97%, having this direct causation on some success in a creative (or discovery) endeavor.

Like that flash of steadfast concentration (the R&D worker bee) then spills over into some contemplative idea generation machine, along with a task force of patent attorneys.

What the parents need to teach their prodigy son is that if he has an original idea, DO NOT write it down in a work or academic lab environment. Keep it at home. And unfortunately, many parents will never teach this obvious fact.

Thus, as time goes by, those original ideas (that is if he has any) become the property of someone else and before you know, the kid's advisor has patents under his name or his company's R&D director, now has a new product launch division.

And yes, when that occurs, very often, the kid gets sacked (if he doesn't play along as a peon) and is then, barred from using similar ideas elsewhere due to anti-compete agreements. Of course, who in academia will teach this principle? None, because they depend upon the pilfering of younger ppl's ideas and know-how.

35   New Renter   2014 Jul 7, 7:44am  

Rin says

What the parents need to teach their prodigy son is that if he has an original idea, DO NOT write it down in a work or academic lab environment. Keep it at home. And unfortunately, many parents will never teach this obvious fact.

The problem with this is that an idea by itself is not worth very much. Investors want proof of concept at the very least. If the idea is just a new program that the kid can write at home "in his free time" that's one thing. If however its say a new cancer drug that will take real resources that one can't find in a typical garage and will be well outside the budget of a typical STEM worker unless s/he has a meth operation on the side.

36   marcus   2014 Jul 7, 8:26am  

Rin says

This is the common lie, which folks like Marcus and others, believe.

I'd prefer you wouldn't speak for what I believe. One would think you could make your point without trolling me.

What I think, based on observation is that the kind of students who get perfect SAT scores, mostly As as grades, and a lot of 5s in AP classes, have a fairly rare combination of three things

1) intellectual aptitude
2) work ethic
3) focus

All 3 of these are pretty much required, to be this kind of student, but these people will differ in which of these they are the strongest in.

I am not making absolute generalizations, but if people show a rare combination of these 3 traits as teenagers, yes, often they are going to be fairly successful later in life as well. And sometimes very much so.

This is not to suggest that academic success is necessary for success later. In fact it's obvious that since 99% of children do not possess this combination of traits (plus the motivation to be so successful academically), you don't need to be as smart as one of these kids to conclude that most highly successful people do not have this kind of academic background.

37   Rin   2014 Jul 7, 9:13am  

marcus says

but if people show a rare combination of these 3 traits as teenagers, yes, often they are going to be fairly successful later in life as well. And sometimes very much so.

The reason why I depart from this line of thinking is that the 4.0 - Science UGPA / 42 - MCAT / 2 undergrad publications profile, while is great at let's say getting accepted to a Johns Hopkins medical school (MD program), is not the vector of what gets ppl ahead at a Boston Consulting Group, JP Morgan, or even my firm, where having business skills, plus a bit of sales and networking support, gets one into the higher levels.

And you're correct, if you attend Hopkins MD and then later, finish your residency in neurosurgery there or at a peer institute like Mayo Clinic, then you're right, you'll be successful. And in this case, it's clearly the USMLE exam scores and medical GPA which got you there, along with recommendations from your residency directors. Outside of a field, like medicine, this sort of direct causation between schoolwork and success is less likely.

marcus says

you don't need to be as smart as one of these kids to conclude that most highly successful people do not have this kind of academic background.

In general, the folks with MBAs (including the Whartons of the world) are able to get the B+'s and A-'s, however, their greatest talent is forming associations with an angle for self-promotion. It's that latter skill, which makes 'em Jr Equity partner at an investment bank or a COO of a Fortune 1000, not the fact that they won some mathematics contests in college. All of our senior partners here are of the above quality.

38   theoakman   2014 Jul 7, 9:47am  

Rin says

In general, the folks with MBAs (including the Whartons of the world) are able to get the B+'s and A-'s, however, their greatest talent is forming associations with an angle for self-promotion. It's that latter skill, which makes 'em Jr Equity partner at an investment bank or a COO of a Fortune 1000, not the fact that they won some mathematics contests in college. All of our senior partners here are of the above quality.

So... long story short, it's not about accomplishing anything? It's just about making friends and promoting yourself.

39   Rin   2014 Jul 7, 10:34am  

theoakman says

Rin says

In general, the folks with MBAs (including the Whartons of the world) are able to get the B+'s and A-'s, however, their greatest talent is forming associations with an angle for self-promotion. It's that latter skill, which makes 'em Jr Equity partner at an investment bank or a COO of a Fortune 1000, not the fact that they won some mathematics contests in college. All of our senior partners here are of the above quality.

So... long story short, it's not about accomplishing anything? It's just about making friends and promoting yourself.

Well, you can kinda have your cake and eat it as well, however, if the seniors at this firm, didn't back my friends and I with real clients (& their clients' capital), we wouldn't be in business today despite our so-called *original* use of phase boundary & fuzzy control theory in the overall system of risk projection/containment.

Plus, our first deal was won by my presentation. And that's when I understood that sales was 'it'. My pitch had little do with applied chemistry or electrical engineering ideas but stressed the culture of the organization and how it addressed the major client concerns.

Personally, I think we're lucky which is why I'm calling it quits after this job. This isn't a career for a real engineering person. Like I said, I'm the *Bobcat of Wall St*. To survive long term, you need to be the Wolf.

And these senior partners are Wall St fellas, Wharton/Columbia b-school types. I think one's also got an additional law degree in there, though I'm not sure if it's Penn, NYU, or London. But you get the picture, pedigree with Wall St and City of London connections, not academicians and scholars.

40   Rin   2014 Jul 7, 11:31pm  

Here we go again ...

http://news.yahoo.com/video/program-prepares-students-careers-stem-042154723.html

So in this propaganda piece, hands-on will get ppl to study STEM.

So when 25% of freshman HSers want to major in STEM, by senior year, that number is down to 12% but having a role model, along with hands-on experience, will prevent that attrition. At least that's the theory.

Since I'd gone through STEM, here's what educators don't get ... professors do not want to give everyone B+'s and higher in the field. The idea is to get enough kids to get C's (or below) in weed out courses like statistical thermodynamics, signals & systems, and so forth. In other words, the homeworks and exams are suppose to be hard and aren't suppose to appeal to this 'hands-on' technician type of careerist.

By default or design, STEM is suppose to be a leaky pipeline!

The end result is that senior STEM graduates are prepared to enter graduate school for the applied sciences. Once again, why doesn't anyone talk about this?

If a person wants hands-on, he should go to a trade school and become a machinist. Thus, this STEM focus is a farce.

If anything, I think kids are smart for not opting for STEM careers, outside of premed, pre-Patent law, pre-business/finance.

41   theoakman   2014 Jul 8, 5:58am  

haha, Rin, it's sad but you're right. I went through graduate school, got the PhD in Physical Chemistry, and the whole Pharma industry high tailed it out of my state in a short period. Now, there are no good jobs for me unless I wanted to work for $40k. So I went into teaching. Anotehr field with no monetary award. Now, what do I do? I push kids into majoring in science and engineering, so they can continue the vicious cycle of going no where.

That being said, in certain professions, being the best simply ensures you get no where. In my profession, it's not possible to get a raise in district. So if I jump ship to another district, I can negotiate a new salary. Right now I teach AP Physics and pretty much have the best results in the state 2 years running and it's only my 3rd year teaching the course. 5th year teaching overall. I've been on a few interviews the past two years. No supervisor is willing to hire me. Why? Because I'm probably much smarter and better than them at what they did. I get the distinct impression that they are 100% against hiring someone that can potentially take their job.

After two years of completely dominating my field, I'm pretty sure that if I ever wanted to get hired anywhere else, I need to do a crappier job. No one likes the new guy coming in and kicking their ass, especially in education where people are so defensive about the job they do.

42   Rin   2014 Jul 8, 6:13am  

theoakman says

I get the distinct impression that they are 100% against hiring someone that can potentially take their job.

This is one of the M.O.s of the work world ...

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Dilbert_principle

43   Rin   2014 Jul 8, 6:19am  

New Renter says

If however its say a new cancer drug that will take real resources that one can't find

In this case, it may have more to do with a type of structural integrity vis-a-vis affinity coefficient. A very smart person will be able to deduce a type of optimization schematic, where the various test conditions could be derived statistically, w/o overdoing the brute force way of trying everything under the sun approach.

Thus, he still needs to keep some of the above secret, otherwise, his employer will have a basis of trying out countless ligands, in a short amount of time, thus making it even harder for the kid to breakout on his own, w/o stealing corporate IP.

44   Rin   2014 Jul 8, 11:31am  

http://finance.yahoo.com/news/survey-finds-math-science-grads-earn-top-dollar-072124599--finance.html

Ok, in this piece someone finally says something ...

Excerpt: 'Le said there also is a "glass-ceiling effect" in the math, science and technology fields. "In a lot of cases, STEM jobs have fewer promotion ladders than other positions" in areas like finance or advertising, he said.'

All right, now this is the first pro-STEM article, which hints at the notion that not everything is rosy at the end of the rainbow.

45   theoakman   2014 Jul 8, 11:33am  

btw, when I was in grad school. One of the students in another lab synthesized a new polymer that was her idea and it ended up having some good minor medical applications. Her boss, who was a blithering idiot and had no business in science is still going around giving talks about the polymer and got herself promoted to dean prior to age 40.

46   Rin   2014 Jul 8, 11:38am  

theoakman says

btw, when I was in grad school. One of the students in another lab synthesized a new polymer that was her idea and it ended up having some good minor medical applications. Her boss, who was a blithering idiot and had no business in science is still going around giving talks about the polymer and got herself promoted to dean prior to age 40.

If this wasn't so common, I'd get really upset over this story. Unfortunately, it's the way it is.

The subject of this thread, the 16 year old prodigy, is ripe for being taken advantage of by similar academic advisors. His parents, instead of being some South Asian *model minority* taskmasters, should make him aware of the world at large and prevent him from becoming a statistic.

47   justme   2014 Jul 8, 6:10pm  

Rin says

If I hear MD-PhD ... meaning, *no debt upon graduation, but ok, I'll put up with a d*ck advisor for some time* to become a debt free anesthesiologist, then you'll hear me, cheering in the aisles.

Can you explain how MD-PhD is a clever way to become a debt free anesthesiologist? This one rang a bell for me but I had not realized there was a connection...

48   Rin   2014 Jul 8, 10:33pm  

justme says

Rin says

If I hear MD-PhD ... meaning, *no debt upon graduation, but ok, I'll put up with a d*ck advisor for some time* to become a debt free anesthesiologist, then you'll hear me, cheering in the aisles.

Can you explain how MD-PhD is a clever way to become a debt free anesthesiologist? This one rang a bell for me but I had not realized there was a connection...

If one is a top student, like this kid, instead of applying for an MD, like the rest of the premeds, he can apply for a joint MD-PhD program. In those programs, the first two years are the first two years of medical school. Then, starting from year three, the student does research for an academic advisor with the idea of getting it done during a 4 year span. And finally, the last year and half are the clinical rotations of medical school. In the end of 8 years, the person has two degrees.

The competitive scholarships for these programs, sometimes called Medical Scientist Training Program, tend to provide a stipend and tuition waiver for up to 8 years. And normally, unlike a PhD, an MD-PhD is suppose to have a finite time of schooling. The smart persons I'd known, who'd done these joint programs, never stayed for more than 7-8 years. But sure, during those 8 years, they were rather busy, not having more than their Sundays off.

Still, unlike other PhD candidates, a residency in medicine, was waiting for them, upon graduation.

Basically, no debt and a whole future in front of them.

49   theoakman   2014 Jul 8, 10:39pm  

justme says

Rin says

If I hear MD-PhD ... meaning, *no debt upon graduation, but ok, I'll put up with a d*ck advisor for some time* to become a debt free anesthesiologist, then you'll hear me, cheering in the aisles.

Can you explain how MD-PhD is a clever way to become a debt free anesthesiologist? This one rang a bell for me but I had not realized there was a connection...

MD PhD candidates are provided with free tuition to the Med School for 7 years. 3 of those years, they do research. For the entire 7 years, they receive a stipend in addition to free tuition that is usually around 30k. So you graduate debt free and get 30k a year tax free. Some of them offer state employee type health insurance on top of it.

50   Rin   2014 Jul 8, 10:41pm  

theoakman says

3 of those years, they do research

From what I'd heard, the research is closer to 4 years and the MD part is compressed into 3 to 3.5 years. Basically those 4th year MD electives are gone from the menu.

51   theoakman   2014 Jul 8, 10:44pm  

Rin says

theoakman says

btw, when I was in grad school. One of the students in another lab synthesized a new polymer that was her idea and it ended up having some good minor medical applications. Her boss, who was a blithering idiot and had no business in science is still going around giving talks about the polymer and got herself promoted to dean prior to age 40.

If this wasn't so common, I'd get really upset over this story. Unfortunately, it's the way it is.

The subject of this thread, the 16 year old prodigy, is ripe for being taken advantage of by similar academic advisors. His parents, instead of being some South Asian *model minority* taskmasters, should make him aware of the world at large and prevent him from becoming a statistic.

I've seen advisor take these things, form a start up company, and come up with a very similar discovery with some slight modifications. Then, they quickly get bought out by a pharma company before they make a lot of money. So they use public money to fund their research, screw over their students who do the actual work, and then they finagle their way into getting themselves paid.

52   Rin   2014 Jul 8, 10:55pm  

theoakman says

So they use public money to fund their research, screw over their students who do the actual work, and then they finagle their way into getting themselves paid.

Sigh .....

And that's the whole point of this thread.

The reason why I wrote this rant is that the parents, guidance counselors, friends of the family, etc aren't talking about this.

Instead, every time this kid scores a 98% on complex variables, they say 'great', now let's give him some more homeworks, more term papers, more lab assignments.

Instead, they need to train him to *pretend to want to be a serf*. And then, once he gains admissions to the MD-PhD with MSTP scholarship or whatever it's called these days, then he can get back to following his interests, provided that he does the expected work for the PhD part of the program.

53   theoakman   2014 Jul 9, 1:47am  

Rin says

theoakman says

So they use public money to fund their research, screw over their students who do the actual work, and then they finagle their way into getting themselves paid.

Sigh .....

And that's the whole point of this thread.

The reason why I wrote this rant is that the parents, guidance counselors, friends of the family, etc aren't talking about this.

Instead, every time this kid scores a 98% on complex variables, they say 'great', now let's give him some more homeworks, more term papers, more lab assignments.

Instead, they need to train him to *pretend to want to be a serf*. And then, once he gains admissions to the MD-PhD with MSTP scholarship or whatever it's called these days, then he can get back to following his interests, provided that he does the expected work for the PhD part of the program.

Well, on the flip side, I had a student 2 years ago that I really admire. Brilliant kid and he is now at Duke studying engineering. He formed a team to compete in an electric car contest and took first place. He hasn't even graduated yet but he was flown out to visit the Tesla headquarters to have a meeting with the board of directors. He really is amazing because he did it all basically on his own time in a garage. The second he graduated high school, I knew he was destined to go far...even as an engineer.

There's another kid who just graduated that is a complete genius and probably puts the kid in this article to shame. He probably could have been in college at age 11 but he stayed in high school just to be around his friends and have a social life. But long story short, the kid is a math genius, established himself as the very top student in the entire nation in Math, Physics, Biology, and Chemistry as a sophomore in high school. He's going to Harvard this year. I really am curious to see if he can manage to turn his gifts into money.

54   Rin   2014 Jul 9, 2:32am  

theoakman says

He really is amazing because he did it all basically on his own time in a garage.

Well that's just it. He did it on his own terms. What's happening to the kid in the article is that he's following the guidelines of society, which is why he has 3 associates degrees because somewhere in his and his parents' minds, is that more certificates are better.

theoakman says

But long story short, the kid is a math genius, established himself as the very top student in the entire nation in Math, Physics, Biology, and Chemistry as a sophomore in high school.

Well, I knew someone exactly like that, representing the USA in international science competitions from the New England region.

He'd attended CalTech on a full scholarship but later, burned out after getting his dual PhD in EE & ChemE. Yes, it was the whole psycho advisor thing. I forgot which evil grad school was his undoing but his parents refused to talk about it.

I think he's some technician at a national lab today, but his career wasn't so spectacular after the crash/burn.

55   Rin   2014 Jul 9, 10:16am  

Rin says

I think he's some technician at a national lab today, but his career wasn't so spectacular after the crash/burn.

Ok, got off the phone with a classmate to get an update.

This former superstar academician is today, a lab assistant for a national lab, doing data analysis on sensor arrays. He's not a principal investigator but is a helping hand. The good part of this work is that the pressure is low [ all govt/defense money, no real deadlines ] but so is the pay, some ~$45K, only a thousand or two, more than an academic postdoc.

Years ago, he'd represented the USA, as one of its top students in Math and Chemistry, for various international competitions. Though he didn't attend my own high school, he was known among the community, as he'd routinely attended the local math contests and basically, blew away the entire coastal region from Connecticut to Maine.

There were countless ppl, dumber than this guy, who earn over a $100K today. If I were to avg out his earnings to brainpower index, he'd be the least successful person I'd ever heard of.

56   corntrollio   2014 Jul 9, 10:26am  

HydroCabron says

I am kind of surprised that this news item is getting any interest. Yawn.

Agree. It's pretty boring, and who gives a crap if he has three useless associates degrees. He could have used his time more wisely than that, as Rin said. Probably mom and dad made him take these stupid community college classes because they weren't creative enough to encourage him to do things that might further a career or get him into a good graduate/professional program.

The other stupid forwarded article was the one about that guy who got into all 8 Ivy league schools. Really? Because he was too stupid to apply only to the 2 he most wanted to go to and wasted his time on the other 6?

That said, I know people who got into all 8 who didn't make the news like that fool, but most of them were athletes. They were all overrepresented ethnicities, unlike the guy in the article, and went to very good public high schools.

57   Strategist   2014 Jul 9, 10:32am  

corntrollio says

The other stupid forwarded article was the one about that guy who got into all 8 Ivy league schools. Really? Because he was too stupid to apply only to the 2 he most wanted to go to and wasted his time on the other 6?

He could have applied in all 8 instead of 2 because he did not want to put all his eggs in 2 baskets. It could also be a strategy to see who offers him the best terms and scholarships.

58   corntrollio   2014 Jul 9, 10:37am  

Strategist says

He could have applied in all 8 instead of 2 because he did not want to put all his eggs in 2 baskets.

That just means he was lazy and didn't do his research to figure out why one would be more suitable than the other, or his mom and dad made him apply to all of them.

Strategist says

It could also be a strategy to see who offers him the best terms and scholarships.

Ivy League schools give no merit-based scholarships for undergrads by Ivy League policy. For the top ones (Yale, Harvard, Princeton), the aid packages are need-based and admissions is need-blind. The financial aid packages for these schools are largely standardized because they are based on the forms for the most part. The other Ivies may do different things, but these three schools are the most generous.

I believe most or all of the other Ivies are now need-blind too, at least for US-based students, although they didn't all used to be. Some of them still try to make money off foreigners by not being need-blind for foreign students. I know one school used to be 97% need-blind not that long ago (meaning, they filled their class mostly need-blind, but for the last few percentages, they looked at financial aid in making an admissions decision), but is now need-blind.

59   Rin   2014 Jul 9, 10:41am  

corntrollio says

who gives a crap if he has three useless associates degrees. He could have used his time more wisely than that, as Rin said. Probably mom and dad made him take these stupid community college classes because they weren't creative enough to encourage him to do things that might further a career or get him into a good graduate/professional program.

The problem is that there are numerous parents, guidance counselors, etc, who keep saying, 'take more classes', 'do more labs', and so forth.

I've seen this kind of brain dead thinking, all over the place.

60   Rin   2014 Jul 9, 10:46am  

corntrollio says

That just means he was lazy and didn't do his research to figure out why one would be more suitable than the other, or his mom and dad made him apply to all of them.

Trust me, many kids don't know what they're doing. They generally defer to mommy/daddy for key decision making.

61   Strategist   2014 Jul 9, 10:51am  

corntrollio says

I believe most or all of the other Ivies are now need-blind too, at least for US-based students, although they didn't all used to be. Some of them still try to make money off foreigners by not being need-blind for foreign students. I know one school used to be 97% need-blind not that long ago (meaning, they filled their class mostly need-blind, but for the last few percentages, they looked at financial aid in making an admissions decision), but is now need-blind.

Only someone closely associated with Universities would know details like this. Are you a teacher/professor?

62   Rin   2014 Jul 9, 11:07am  

I was told that Brown Univ was the premier Ivy college, which specifically shopped around for the richest student body, so that it could offer that perfect blend of a lazy, *bumming around* college experience, plus some prestige, and money coming back from well off alumni later.

63   theoakman   2014 Jul 9, 12:35pm  

That's why a lot of booksmart people gravitate towards medicine by default. They at least have a guaranteed income that is well above average. Problem is, the finance arm of this industry bleeds the kids now for all they can with tuition and debt.

Doctors are a labor cartel of A students that prevent anyone from entering their field unless they have the grades. They are also well banded together to prevent non-doctors from performing menial tasks.

64   Rin   2014 Jul 9, 12:40pm  

theoakman says

That's why a lot of booksmart people gravitate towards medicine by default. They at least have a guaranteed income that is well above average. Problem is, the finance arm of this industry bleeds the kids now for all they can with tuition and debt.

Doctors are a labor cartel of A students that prevent anyone from entering their field unless they have the grades. They are also well banded together to prevent non-doctors from performing menial tasks.

You're one of the few persons, who's willing to say this out loud.

Everyone else makes these so-called claims that they could have been law partners or bankers but instead, chose medicine to help humanity.

What BS!

Many MDs will have failed in law, finance, consulting, etc, because those areas are about politics and playing corporate games.

65   Rin   2014 Jul 9, 12:42pm  

Rin says

Many MDs will have failed in law, finance, consulting, etc, because those areas are about politics and playing corporate games.

My only interest in medical school, after this hedge fund work, is so that I have a guaranteed degree (within 4 years) where I can conduct research and publish papers, w/o being in some 6-10 year neverending PhD program.

66   theoakman   2014 Jul 10, 12:27am  

Rin says

Rin says

Many MDs will have failed in law, finance, consulting, etc, because those areas are about politics and playing corporate games.

My only interest in medical school, after this hedge fund work, is so that I have a guaranteed degree (within 4 years) where I can conduct research and publish papers, w/o being in some 6-10 year neverending PhD program.

Well, as a veteran of grad school, I can tell you that the way you get out of the neverending PhD program is to go on interviews and lie about your expected graduation date. The second you get a job offer, they suddenly become willing to graduate you.

67   corntrollio   2014 Jul 10, 2:27am  

Strategist says

Only someone closely associated with Universities would know details like this. Are you a teacher/professor?

No, this is/was public knowledge on their website, and they stated it openly on tours. It's not insider knowledge at all unless you choose not to read information available to you.

Rin says

I was told that Brown Univ was the premier Ivy college, which specifically shopped around for the richest student body

If I remember correctly, Brown was the one that used to be 97% need-blind.

68   corntrollio   2014 Jul 10, 2:33am  

Rin says

The problem is that there are numerous parents, guidance counselors, etc, who keep saying, 'take more classes', 'do more labs', and so forth.

I've seen this kind of brain dead thinking, all over the place.

This kind of nonsense is very common among East Asian and Indian immigrant parents. All they know is "become a doctor", and they typically know fuck-all about how college/grad schools really work in this country, and they have a very limited view of the job market. Some of the upper middle class parents who are doctors may be able to direct their kids to something that will help them get into med school, but otherwise they are mostly clueless and just encourage their kids to do more without knowing what more is. For example: "You should become an Eagle Scout. Jawaharlal became an Eagle Scout, and now he goes to Harvard."

69   Strategist   2014 Jul 10, 2:49am  

corntrollio says

Rin says

The problem is that there are numerous parents, guidance counselors, etc, who keep saying, 'take more classes', 'do more labs', and so forth.

I've seen this kind of brain dead thinking, all over the place.

This kind of nonsense is very common among East Asian and Indian immigrant parents. All they know is "become a doctor", and they typically know fuck-all about how college/grad schools really work in this country, and they have a very limited view of the job market. Some of the upper middle class parents who are doctors may be able to direct their kids to something that will help them get into med school, but otherwise they are mostly clueless and just encourage their kids to do more without knowing what more is. For example: "You should become an Eagle Scout. Jawaharlal became an Eagle Scout, and now he goes to Harvard."

There's a large white house at the highest point in Yorba Lind overlooking the 91 freeway. It's owned by an Indian family where the parents and children are all doctors. The land used to belong to Arnold Schwarznegger who sold it because the city would not allow a helicopter pad on the property.
The home is for sale for $21 million.

70   corntrollio   2014 Jul 10, 4:03am  

Strategist says

There's a large white house at the highest point in Yorba Lind overlooking the 91 freeway. It's owned by an Indian family where the parents and children are all doctors. The land used to belong to Arnold Schwarznegger who sold it because the city would not allow a helicopter pad on the property.

The home is for sale for $21 million.

You're talking about Satsang? Their property tax valuation is still under $4M, so they probably paid dick for the land and then they built a tacky house on it. I'm not really sure what your point is, in any case.

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