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STEM a/o educational wonks, really don't know what they're talking


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2015 Aug 29, 3:35pm   19,170 views  80 comments

by Rin   ➕follow (8)   💰tip   ignore  

about, in the reality of things.

Just this last week, I'd gotten an unsolicited call from an old acquaintance, who'd now become a headhunter. Earlier on, he was a programmer/analyst for a mutual fund.

He knew that I was experienced with Oracle databases (plus tech/financial background, ala chemical engineering/hedge fund, blah, blah) and decided to throw a potential req at me. Unfortunately, his client wanted a person with a CPA, with direct audit experience, and not a type of Mr-Know-It-All with financial, oracle, and general technical know-all. Basically, from my old acquaintance's summary statement, an engineer in finance, was not the same as an accountant in audit, despite possibly knowing the same stuff, from the Oracle systems' pov.

And what's so funny about the whole thing is that my friend knew that I could do the job with my eyes closed [ since the issues were technical and not in the tax codes ] but yet, an accountant was more marketable than me. Sure, my current salary is higher than any accountant/tax expert but still, a lot of that had to do with me being in the starting dozen with equity.

So again, I laugh at those who get on this forum and tout STEM crap. Please, give it a rest. The world doesn't give a fuck about your stupid opinions.

In my homeschooling example ... ppl say that students can't learn advanced math topics like Calculus, Differential Equations, etc, without regular instruction. I believe Oakman and Marcus are a part of this contingency.

But then again, what accountants/CPAs do you know of, get top grades in those classes anyways? Exactly, only the ones who'd decided to leave being a math major for a business career. Many ppl are not good at academics but still manage all right in the work world.

So what's the big fucking deal about a person getting a 'C' at physics at Harvard Extension school, while homeschooling, since that person may never plan on being in the sciences to begin with? You see, you're overstating your conceptual construct of your own value, based upon education. In my situation, I could get A-'s and A's, in any Harvard Extension class. And the reason for that is very simple … it's called doing the work. Got it?!

STEM education is bullshit.

And In general, education is bullshit. Ppl are simply collecting credentials for basic white collar stuff, brand name diplomas for consulting/finance, and a host of other nonsensical activities.

This concept of the prestigious and hard working, dedicated Navy Nuclear engineer motif is ONLY for the armed services. It doesn't apply for the real world.

If you disagree with the above then screw you!

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16   theoakman   2015 Aug 30, 7:52pm  

thunderlips11 says

Agreed, at least 50% of the time I find myself scouring the internet for other examples aside from the power point slides (which are themselves based on other textbooks) in the Coursera Class. 90% of the difficulty of learning something is finding the right text or website. One chart or visualization can make the difference between "Aha!" and "Uhhh...."

However, I like this course, Intro to Chem. The MITx assumed AP Chemistry students, the kind that get accepted into MIT, and blew through the basics in one lesson, basics I never learned.

If you want a great set of resources for Chem, there is a great teacher at Stuyvesant high school in New York named Steven O'Malley. He's put together an amazing set of resources to learn General Chem and Organic Chem 1.
http://www.omalleychem.info/

17   MisdemeanorRebel   2015 Sep 1, 10:22am  

theoakman says

If you want a great set of resources for Chem, there is a great teacher at Stuyvesant high school in New York named Steven O'Malley. He's put together an amazing set of resources to learn General Chem and Organic Chem 1.

http://www.omalleychem.info/

@theoakman, right on man, his slides are great. I just ordered a book "All Lab, No Lecture".

18   anonymous   2015 Sep 1, 11:06am  

And that's the whole point, the world doesn't give a rat's about education. It's about being able to find employment and putting food on the table.

--------------

its not that the world doesn't give a rats ass about education. It's more that plenty of that "education ", is of no utility to the masses.

What can your typical 98 IQ shlep, do with a STEM education?

19   Rin   2015 Sep 1, 11:08am  

theoakman says

Stuyvesant high school in New York

Almost every other student at Stuy, given the fact that they accept less than a few percent of NYC applicants, could have homeschooled his/her self and gotten a college degree, by the age of 17/18, using a mix of homeschooling and distance learning.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Stuyvesant_High_School

I believe that Stuy does not have a fast track to the Ivy League ordinary admissions, since so many graduates from that place, apply for all the same programs like Columbia, Harvard, MIT, Yale, P'ton, etc. See the excerpt below:

Stuy article says

3.67% of Stuyvesant students went on to attend Harvard, Princeton, and Yale Universities, ranking it as the 9th top public high school in the United States and 120th among all schools, public or private. In December 2007, The Wall Street Journal studied the freshman classes at eight selective colleges (Harvard, Princeton, MIT, Williams College, Pomona College, Swarthmore College, U. Chicago, and Johns Hopkins), and reported that Stuyvesant sent 67, or 9.9% of its 674 seniors, to them.

Here's my response to the above ... big fucking deal!

I've only seen one resume in my career, where the person had bragged about attending Stuy. It read like this ...

Education:

BS, SUNY (one of the big campuses), Electrical Engineering, Summa Cum Laude

HS Diploma, Stuyvesant High School of NYC

Guess what? No one was wowed by the above.

If you live in the Boston area, you can completely drop high school, take the train into Harvard Square, and get yourself a complete bachelors degree from Harvard's night program, the Extension School. You can also take courses at Harvard College, during the day, as a special student, if your grades are good.

A lot of bright ppl, have done the above and had gotten into graduate programs at Harvard, MIT, Columbia, Chicago, etc, w/o playing the game of undergraduate admissions. So what's the big deal about a place like Stuyvesant in that case?

20   Rin   2015 Sep 1, 11:20am  

Rin says

Stuyvesant High School of NYC

Also, don't think about the school, think about the individual.

How is the individual, the one who'd gotten the mark to attend Stuy, benefited by being there, since NO ONE in the real world, cares about which high school one had attended? Realize, this isn't England where attending Eton is critical for being *seen* as born rich. Plus, everyone knows that Stuy isn't a rich kid's school. In NYC, that's Dalton. And thus, a Dalton alumni has better business networking opportunities than his counterparts at a working class place like Stuy.

21   B.A.C.A.H.   2015 Sep 1, 11:48am  

It's just a Cool and Hip Buzzword Acronym.
If you don't cite it, you're not Cool and Hip.
I know "STEM" PhD's who couldn't change a tire to save their lives.
I'm sure you do, too.

22   MMR   2015 Sep 1, 2:40pm  

Rin says

If you want some real uni class, try MIT OCW, Univ of Illinois/UC, London Uni

If you use those courses, could you actually get a degree? Granted, I understand that a degree is BS and all, but some people like to look at that piece of paper.

23   MMR   2015 Sep 1, 3:05pm  

Rin says

everyone knows that Stuy isn't a rich kid's school

It's an Asian Joe Bloggs school. It lacks the 'fast track' to the Ivy because All the candidates look the same (on paper) and come from the same background (not rich/prominent) and accepting too many of them is antithetical to the purpose of the Ivy, which is to "build better leaders" and enhance networking capabilities/capacities. Still lot of people from there get into Ivy schools.

Fast track, are basically schools that are members of the Eight schools Association and schools that are part of the Ivy Preparatory School League.

http://www.thecrimson.com/article/2013/12/13/making-harvard-feeder-schools/?page=1

http://www.businessinsider.com/st-pauls-is-part-of-the-prep-school-ivy-league-2015-8

p=1284334&c=1224573#comment-1224573">Rin says

Stuy does not have a fast track to the Ivy League ordinary admissions, since so many graduates from that place

.....Are Asian Joe bloggs cookie cutter candidates who are placed into a pile competing against each other.

http://www.bloomberg.com/bw/articles/2014-11-21/princeton-review-tells-asians-to-act-less-asian-and-black-students-to-attach-photos

24   Rin   2015 Sep 2, 9:36am  

MMR says

Rin says

If you want some real uni class, try MIT OCW, Univ of Illinois/UC, London Uni

If you use those courses, could you actually get a degree? Granted, I understand that a degree is BS and all, but some people like to look at that piece of paper.

I believe that if one takes courses at one's local community college or state uni, it's possible to transfer into London's online program because they can evaluate US university grades but not those of our high schools, since we don't have As and Os level exams.

25   Rin   2015 Sep 2, 2:17pm  

MMR says

Rin says

everyone knows that Stuy isn't a rich kid's school

It's an Asian Joe Bloggs school. It lacks the 'fast track' to the Ivy because All the candidates look the same (on paper) and come from the same background (not rich/prominent) and accepting too many of them is antithetical to the purpose of the Ivy, which is to "build better leaders" and enhance networking capabilities/capacities. Still lot of people from there get into Ivy schools.

There's more to it than that. From any of these cookie-cutter magnet public HS (with high Asian-American Joe Bloggs), a huge number of them (sometimes a majority of the Asians in the class), not just the magna cum laude crowd, all apply for the same colleges at the same exact time. And thus, by virtue of the deluge, every applicant from there is at a disadvantage from the opening gate.

As a result, you have ppl, who spend every waking moment, trying to win violinist, essay, or drama contests, to beat the kids sitting next to them. Isn't that energy better spent, homeschooling, taking college courses part-time, and then, finishing a college degree by the time one is an adult?

On the other hand, from a brand name private school, the average person there, who isn't let's say magna cum laude material, for instance, John Kerry, Al Gore, etc, when they apply for colleges, they don't necessarily put the kid-on-scholarship (sorry, make that a loan) sitting next to them, at a significant disadvantage, because one, the Ivies tend to accept more from those places (due to legacy and rich donor types), and at the same time, they can give consideration to a middle classer for making the numbers (GPA/SATs/APs) from the rich kids' camps, look better.

When I see resumes from applicants who list their magnet high schools, not just Stuy, I almost feel like crying, because I know exactly that they're thinking. It's like somehow, the world handed 'em a lemon, and now, they're holding up a lemonade sign attempting to make that look important for a world which cares about the following ...

1) Job --- Risk Analyst
2) Firm --- XYZ Capital Group
3) College (and/or Business/Law) School --- Ivies/Duke/Stanford/MIT/Oxbridge/London/Chicago

And if the above has high school listed (or worse, a science award from HS), then that person looks like a chump, because at that point in his career, his work experience should cover the first page and a half.

26   MMR   2015 Sep 3, 8:32pm  

Rin says

As a result, you have ppl, who spend every waking moment, trying to win violinist, essay, or drama contests, to beat the kids sitting next to them. Isn't that energy better spent, homeschooling, taking college courses part-time, and then, finishing a college degree by the time one is an adult?

They can't do that once they've overspent to live in a top school district. Rin says

MMR says

Rin says

If you want some real uni class, try MIT OCW, Univ of Illinois/UC, London Uni

If you use those courses, could you actually get a degree? Granted, I understand that a degree is BS and all, but some people like to look at that piece of paper.

I believe that if one takes courses at one's local community college or state uni, it's possible to transfer into London's online program because they can evaluate US university grades but not those of our high schools, since we don't have As and Os level exams

So you are saying that one need not actually complete high school but rather take the comparable courses at a community college and transfer into London's online program? If one were headed on the path to the London online program, how would the MIT courses or UIUC courses be used? I truly wish I had known someone like you and had this level of guidance when I was a teenager. I think I would have achieved a lot more.

27   MMR   2015 Sep 3, 8:34pm  

Rin says

When I see resumes from applicants who list their magnet high schools, not just Stuy, I almost feel like crying, because I know exactly that they're thinking. It's like somehow, the world handed 'em a lemon, and now, they're holding up a lemonade sign attempting to make that look important for a world which cares about the following ...

That's sad since a very high percentage of the kids graduating from stuy end up doing a science based major at a place like Stony Brook.

28   MMR   2015 Sep 3, 8:42pm  

Rin says

And thus, by virtue of the deluge, every applicant from there is at a disadvantage from the opening gate.

Especially the Asian applicantRin says

As a result, you have ppl, who spend every waking moment, trying to win violinist, essay, or drama contests

Add spelling bee for the IndiansRin says

who isn't let's say magna cum laude material, for instance, John Kerry, Al Gore, etc, when they apply for colleges, they don't necessarily put the kid-on-scholarship (sorry, make that a loan) sitting next to them, at a significant disadvantag

Are people who come from prominent families that have a long history of philanthropy. Knowing people like them and rubbing elbows with people like them is what gives the Ivy their mystique. A school full of Asians offers no such mystique.

29   Rin   2015 Sep 3, 9:16pm  

MMR says

If one were headed on the path to the London online program, how would the MIT courses or UIUC courses be used?

The streaming free classes (MIT, UI, etc) are there to learn the material, since one can't get credit for them, w/o forking over the cash as a special student.

Then, taking similar classes at the community college or local state uni would be pure review and thus, a person would get a 3.9-4.0 with minimal added effort. Afterwards, sophomore level transfer admissions to London online shouldn't be a problem. Plus, the UK bachelors is
only 3 years so it's not like one needs to spend 4 years doing the program.

MMR says

That's sad since a very high percentage of the kids graduating from stuy end up doing a science based major at a place like Stony Brook.

Yes, a total and complete waste.

30   MisdemeanorRebel   2015 Sep 4, 9:12am  

Rin, what's the deal with A and O levels, do you have a idea about that?

Love the UK Bachelors, less fluff more course stuff. It's not half or more of the time doing unrelated stuff ("Electives") like US Bachelor's Degrees.

31   MisdemeanorRebel   2015 Sep 4, 9:15am  

MMR says

That's sad since a very high percentage of the kids graduating from stuy end up doing a science based major at a place like Stony Brook.

What's the deal with SUNY Stony Brook? I know there's a lot of Foreign Profs there that don't speak English.

MMR says

So you are saying that one need not actually complete high school but rather take the comparable courses at a community college and transfer into London's online program? If one were headed on the path to the London online program, how would the MIT courses or UIUC courses be used? I truly wish I had known someone like you and had this level of guidance when I was a teenager. I think I would have achieved a lot more.

Me too. I spent my Senior Year taking Shop classes just to fill the schedule. I didn't know, and the dumbass Guidance Counselor didn't mention, that I could have taken Comm College Courses for free. All I needed was a P/E and English Credit by the end of my Junior Year. Could have banged out English Comp 101 and taken a Swim Class, along with 4-5 other courses and gone in to school bypassing my Freshman Year.

Preach on, Rin.

32   MisdemeanorRebel   2015 Sep 4, 9:30am  

By the way, U of L has individual courses they'll apply to a degree if you pass. Great for a 16-17 year old to take Accounting or Econ 101. Also useful if your education has been unorthodox as a means of gaining admittance.

If you can learn it remotely, using video lectures and textbooks, you can learn almost anything.

33   Rin   2015 Sep 4, 9:57am  

thunderlips11 says

By the way, U of L has individual courses they'll apply to a degree if you pass. Great for a 16-17 year old to take Accounting or Econ 101. Also useful if your education has been unorthodox as a means of gaining admittance.

If you can learn it remotely, using video lectures and textbooks, you can learn almost anything.

I think the only problem with London online is that it's not that accommodating for kids.

On the other foot, they have no problems, assessing American university coursework, much like their own, either in Britain or the Commonwealth.

So to do that special student -- > to full-time student path at UoL, you're already talking about a 17-18 year old.

On the other hand, an American can get Precalculus, Calculus I to III, Statistics, Micro and Macroeconomics, all done, by the age of 16, using free online courses plus community or local state colleges to verify the credentials. Basically, you first learn the material online but then, take the community college course to get the 'A' and the academic credit.

By UoL's standard, any 3.8 is an 'A' average, from any American university.

34   Rin   2015 Sep 4, 10:08am  

thunderlips11 says

Rin, what's the deal with A and O levels, do you have a idea about that?

It's the sort of former British Empire weighted average of the American AP/CLEP exams and the national Olympiads but for the UK and the members of their Commonwealth nations.

There's so much debate going on, on whether or not the system works or not, makes it a wasteful process for an American to sieve through.

As an applicant from another American college, whether it's a community college or a state univ, none of that stuff matters once the GED is in place. At that point in time, if you've got the GPA from an American college, you've got it.

35   Rin   2015 Sep 4, 10:30am  

thunderlips11 says

Great for a 16-17 year old to take Accounting or Econ 101

Also, I wouldn't worry so much about accounting vs let's say econometrics or applied math.

After the UoL experience, an American may still need to get a part-time MS in Accounting, stateside, to sit for the CPA exam in America. The purpose of London is to one, fulfill the need for a bachelor's degree, and two, a bachelor's degree which looks good when one later segues into careers in finance or management consulting, where they like ppl with brand name diplomas on their roster.

And in my poo-poo on the SUNYs, CUNYs, or UConns, it's ok to get a postgraduate MS in Accounting from those places, just for the CPA thing, but then, not emphasize that on the resume. So when one later applies for a job at a financial services company, the resume looks like this ...

1) Experience:

ABC Inc, doing research analysis on weakened currency pairings

2) Education:

B.S. Economics/Math, London University, London School of Economics program, First Class Honours

Postgraduate training in Accounting, Univ of Connecticut, received masters degree certification

So you see, in my above example, in place of looking like some state univ loser, the person looks like a global type, with some localized professional credentials.

The above looks so much better than the following Joe Loser who'd attended a Magnet high school ...

1) Experience:

ABC Inc, doing research analysis on weakened currency pairings

2) Education:

H.S. Diploma, Bronx High School of Science, won spelling bee in senior year

B.S. Electronics Engineering, Univ of Connecticut, Summa Cum Laude

M.S. Accounting, Univ of Connecticut

The Magnet guy would most likely get the 'loser' vs the 'worldly' label.

36   Rin   2015 Sep 4, 4:51pm  

Is it me, or is this one of the few threads where for the most part, everyone agrees with me?

37   Rin   2015 Sep 4, 5:41pm  

Ironman says

Rin says

Is it me, or is this one of the few threads where for the most part, everyone agrees with me?

Yep, all the two or three people participating have agreed with you. It must be a new record!!

Anyone trolling this topic would argue things like ... it's "what you learn which counts" and a bunch of other feel good malarkey of the 80s and 90s, where they would tout the socialization value of high school and the fact that Jack Welsh had attended a state college, instead of MIT or CalTech.

Now, it's more clear that places like management consulting and financial services are much more about how one *looks* vs what's under the hood.

38   theoakman   2015 Sep 4, 6:12pm  

I do agree. I live 2 blocks from a feeder school where 30% of the kids go to Princeton. These kids pick up a $150 restaurant tab with their allowance. After listening to their conversations for about 2 minutes, I know my asian students would bury them intellectually and academically. But these privileged kids will be the ones graduating from an Ivy in 4 to 5 years and commanding 6 figure salaries at age 22. It's inevitable.

39   MisdemeanorRebel   2015 Sep 4, 6:13pm  

The scary part is the ones that go Poli Sci/Int Relations will be running the country.

40   MisdemeanorRebel   2015 Sep 4, 6:16pm  

Rin says

And in my poo-poo on the SUNYs, CUNYs, or UConns, it's ok to get a postgraduate MS in Accounting from those places, just for the CPA thing, but then, not emphasize that on the resume. So when one later applies for a job at a financial services company, the resume looks like this ...

Jesus, I know SUNY is/was a great STEM School. Another sign of incredible inequity in our society.

41   Rin   2015 Sep 4, 6:21pm  

theoakman says

feeder school where 30% of the kids go to Princeton. These kids pick up a $150 restaurant tab with their allowance. After listening to their conversations for about 2 minutes, I know my asian students would bury them intellectually and academically. But these privileged kids will be the ones graduating from an Ivy

The reason for that has a lot to do with their dads being Lloyd Blankfein or John Kerry types. The feeder school is merely the gathering grounds of those offsprings. And thus, they get their CVs polished, looking good, so that the admissions ppl at the Ivies admit them, w/o too much debate. And then, those same Ivies will admit the perfect Asian applicant with the best possible numbers, so that when averaged in with John Kerry Jr, Gore the III, Bush the IV, or Rockefeller the V, that the elite school average comes out looking good.

42   Rin   2015 Sep 4, 6:27pm  

thunderlips11 says

Jesus, I know SUNY is/was a great STEM School. Another sign of incredible inequity in our society.

IMHO, in the northeast corridor, no eastern state school is considered prestigious by the management consulting and/or investment banking types.

At best, Univ of Virginia (mostly due to law/business) and Georgia Tech (though mainly due to Silicon Valley [and not Wall St]) are the only two prestigious east coast public schools. The others are considered consolation prizes for those who didn't either gain admissions or get the good scholarship packages to the private schools. BTW, no one cares about the Univ of North Carolina/Chapel Hill outside of pure academia and those who live in the south.

43   MisdemeanorRebel   2015 Sep 4, 6:31pm  

Man, I can't wait for the revolution and tax those fuckers 20% and 2% like the commission it is.

You're alright Rin, we'll come up with a loophole for ya.

44   Rin   2015 Sep 4, 6:33pm  

thunderlips11 says

Man, I can't wait for the revolution and tax those fuckers 20% and 2% like the commission it is.

Thunderlips, I'm getting a sense that you've fully acknowledged all my arguments. Wow, the world has changed since my childhood. Much of the above would have been considered impolite, if I'd said it back in those years.

45   Rin   2015 Sep 4, 6:46pm  

thunderlips11 says

You're alright Rin, we'll come up with a loophole for ya.

I'm going to retire to Australia, with legal brothels, using my eggsnest, so I'll be out of the system.

46   MMR   2015 Sep 4, 7:22pm  

thunderlips11 says

What's the deal with SUNY Stony Brook? I know there's a lot of Foreign Profs there that don't speak English.

academically it has a good reputation and to improve the prestige factor, they have actually stopped calling themselves a SUNY school, although technically they are still part of the SUNY system. This is what I gathered from talking to several students who went to Stony Brook. The same people also told me how tough the school is academically in the sciences. It is a top-notch research university but still not really considered a 'public ivy' although that appears to be a goal of the university moving forward

47   theoakman   2015 Sep 4, 7:30pm  

Rin says

The reason for that has a lot to do with their dads being Lloyd Blankfein or John Kerry types. The feeder school is merely the gathering grounds of those offsprings. And thus, they get their CVs polished, looking good, so that the admissions ppl at the Ivies admit them, w/o too much debate. And then, those same Ivies will admit the perfect Asian applicant with the best possible numbers, so that when averaged in with John Kerry Jr, Gore the III, Bush the IV, or Rockefeller the V, that the elite school average comes out looking good.

I switched districts, but the past few years, my classes were 60% asian. I probably had the best non-magnet student body in the state. I would always send 2 to Princeton. Usually, they had to be the top student in the state on some level along with being a world class violinist or clarinetist. Ironically, I had another girl who was white and ranked #2 in the class behind an asian prodigy who had a legitimate claim to top student in the nation. He was in the top 20 in the country for high school students in bio, physics, and math by age 14. Both of her parents went to Princeton and she was rejected.

48   MMR   2015 Sep 4, 7:35pm  

theoakman says

I do agree. I live 2 blocks from a feeder school where 30% of the kids go to Princeton

The private schools might be Princeton Day School, Lawrenceville school, Hun School .....Public schools might be West Windsor/Plainsboro or Montgomery Twp HS....Out of those schools, West Windsor/Plainsboro (North and South) are the Asian Joe bloggs school. I have relatives there (Plainsboro) and their kids went there with the daughter who graduated from Cooper Union with a STEM major (civil) and volunteered for a STEM non-profit to get underserved minorities into
STEM by feeding them BS.

http://iridescentlearning.org/

49   MMR   2015 Sep 4, 7:48pm  

theoakman says

I know my asian students would bury them intellectually and academically.

Academically yes, Intellectually, that's debatable. Lot of those guys have no exposure to the world outside of their bubble. That's why their college applications consist of essays about similar cookie cutter topics:

http://www.bloomberg.com/bw/articles/2014-11-21/princeton-review-tells-asians-to-act-less-asian-and-black-students-to-attach-photos

From article: outlining ways candidates such as these can play down their Asianness, including advising against application essays that discuss how their culture affects their lives. “These are Asian Joe Bloggs topics, and they are incredibly popular.”

50   Rin   2015 Sep 4, 7:49pm  

MMR says

academically it has a good reputation and to improve the prestige factor, they have actually stopped calling themselves a SUNY school, although technically they are still part of the SUNY system. This is what I gathered from talking to several students who went to Stony Brook. The same people also told me how tough the school is academically in the sciences. It is a top-notch research university but still not really considered a 'public ivy' although that appears to be a goal of the university moving forward

There are a number of tough, state university science and engineering programs out there. But yet, most state unis are not in the prestige game. The reason for that is that the age of STEM prestige is over, the exceptions being Carnegie-Mellon, CalTech, MIT, and Stanford. The last state unis to win at that card match was Virginia, with law/business, and Georgia Tech, with high SV placements. Even the vaunted Univ of Illinois/UC, is slowly becoming a forgotten wheat field oasis, despite being the next best hard core engineering school to MIT, because it's never been able to sell its law/business offerings and build a non-middle-of-nowhere culture to the outside world.

What Stony Brook needs to do is to merge degrees with NYU and become their suburban campus but then, work out a deal with the state to maintain the in-state tuition for NY residents. With that, the rich idiots will stay in the Greenwich Village/NYC campus, while the smarter ones (see Stuy, Bronx Science, etc), will be on the Stony Brook campus, doing good work, while earning a degree which says, New York University: Long Island Institute of Tech. And then, you won't have this issue because the resume will read

B.S. Accounting and Applied Math
New York University, LIIT scholars

The above looks a lot better than posting the name of one's high school. Plus, over time, LIIT scholars will clearly start to make waves in the business world, including accounting, finance, consulting, etc. A lot of that will have to do with the other smart NYers, not just the Stuy/Joe Asian bloggs, attending that place and building credentials on academic merit, versus attending Fordham, Manhattan College, etc, on full scholarships.

51   MMR   2015 Sep 4, 7:56pm  

Rin says

no eastern state school is considered prestigious by the management consulting and/or investment banking types.

I always thought it was Harvard, Yale, MIT, Columbia, UPenn, UChicago, Northwestern and Stanford. Are any public schools seen as prestigious to management consulting/ banking types?

52   Rin   2015 Sep 4, 7:58pm  

MMR says

Rin says

no eastern state school is considered prestigious by the management consulting and/or investment banking types.

I always thought it was Harvard, Yale, MIT, Columbia, UPenn, UChicago, Northwestern and Stanford. Are any public schools seen as prestigious to management consulting/ banking types?

It's still 'ok' to attend Virginia, Michigan, UC/Berkeley, and I think some oddball places like William & Mary.

53   Rin   2015 Sep 4, 8:05pm  

theoakman says

Usually, they had to be the top student in the state on some level along with being a world class violinist or clarinetist. Ironically, I had another girl who was white and ranked #2 in the class behind an asian prodigy who had a legitimate claim to top student in the nation.

I'm still trying to understand why these particular kids went to HS at all?

I know that if they lived within commuting distance of Cambridge MA, both of 'em could have attended the Extension program at Harvard and gotten a bachelor's degree by the age of 17/18, graduating with a high undergrad GPA, and then, started upon a graduate program at Harvard, MIT, Yale, Oxbridge, or any other school.

54   Rin   2015 Sep 4, 8:10pm  

Rin says

both of 'em could have attended the Extension program at Harvard

And honestly, I don't see why every Asian upstart wants to attend the daytime Harvard College. Remember, Al Gore had attended and he's an idiot, though a son of a senator.

55   MMR   2015 Sep 4, 8:30pm  

Rin says

On the other hand, an American can get Precalculus, Calculus I to III, Statistics, Micro and Macroeconomics, all done, by the age of 16, using free online courses plus community or local state colleges to verify the credentials. Basically, you first learn the material online but then, take the community college course to get the 'A' and the academic credit.

In this scenario, the student would essentially get a GED, then do these free online courses to learn the material then get the easy 'A' by taking the same courses at a local community college? Is that correct?

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