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API test scores and real estate prices


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2012 Sep 25, 2:05am   42,860 views  138 comments

by SJ   ➕follow (0)   💰tip   ignore  

Why do API test scores and schools matter so much to real estate prices? Is it possible to buy a nice home at an affordable price in a safe area in California?

#housing

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129   raindoctor   2013 Jul 3, 3:32am  

thomaswong.1986 says

my two cents, our great need today is alternative energy sources,

you will find great success looking after natural gas in middle america.

Not sure we need additional SW programmers, doctors or lawyers.

Even though what you say is true for those who can live for another 200 years, we, mere mortals, care about what is gonna happen in this decade and the next decade. That's how people are. When polity, policy is filled up with such people, who wanna make a quick buck for next decades, how about those who don't have power? What can the latter do? Just follow the elite sheep.

130   Rin   2013 Jul 3, 4:06am  

One last time ...

The purpose of elite 'brand' name school is not education but access to recruiting by management consulting or financial services firms.

Thus, if you want to become a doctor or ancillary heath care provider (like PA, nurse, PT, etc), you can take these courses: biology, general chemistry, organic chemistry, general physics, intro to calculus at any school, get your A's and then, apply for medical school or some other program in health care. For this crowd, go through homeschooling, download those lectures from the net, and keep studying.

What one gets from let's say Columbia, Harvard, Princeton, London School of Economics is this... McKinsey, Booz-Allen, MSDW, Goldman Sachs, Lazard, etc, send reps to the campuses and routinely wine and dine students, with the idea of getting the 'best' of the breed to apply and then, these persons start out as junior research analyst, get in about 3-4 years, leave for an MBA (that is if they don't already have an MS/PhD or JD), and then they return to those firms as a senior analyst with hopefully either a partnership track or access to a client with a C-level executive track.

One of my lucky friends got one of the aforementioned firms to pay for his weekend executive MBA at Columbia and thus, he never needed to leave, to get his move up the food chain.

The above MC/IB recruiters, for the most part, do not recruit from public universities with a handful of exceptions like UC/Berkeley, Michigan, or Virginia. Yes, graduates from these schools are typically frowned down upon at Goldman. For them, brand name (being on the inside) matters more than raw intelligence, hard work, or capability and thus, even ppl from Georgia Tech, Univ of Illinois Engineering, Rensselaer Polytechnic, etc aren't really all that welcome.

131   AD   2013 Jul 3, 4:47am  

SJ says

Why do API test scores and schools matter so much to real estate prices? Is it possible to buy a nice home at an affordable price in a safe area in California?

I am going to take the bait here. "Good schools" and "high test scores" are code words for white and/or Asian-American affluent neighborhoods. I think that are not-so subtly trying to mean that they are not being over-run by non-Asian minorities.

132   FunTime   2013 Jul 3, 11:15am  

adarmiento says

"Good schools" and "high test scores" are code words for

conformity. Which has a lot of value and we all do it some, but I've rarely envied dedicated conformists to the point of wanting to trade lives.

133   AD   2013 Jul 3, 12:49pm  

FunTime says

conformity. Which has a lot of value and we all do it some, but I've rarely envied dedicated conformists to the point of wanting to trade lives.

Yeah right............

134   FunTime   2013 Jul 5, 6:50am  

adarmiento says

Yeah right............

You're referring to the strength of conformity on humans? I did carefully write "rarely" to show I'm not immune to the pull of conformity.

135   raindoctor   2013 Jul 5, 7:02am  

Well, conformity = less risk. If conformity leads to losses (as in recent housing bubble), all those conformants can sob together and blame someone else, like the government, banks, etc.

136   dublin hillz   2013 Jul 5, 7:27am  

adarmiento says

SJ says



Why do API test scores and schools matter so much to real estate prices? Is it possible to buy a nice home at an affordable price in a safe area in California?


I am going to take the bait here. "Good schools" and "high test scores" are code words for white and/or Asian-American affluent neighborhoods. I think that are not-so subtly trying to mean that they are not being over-run by non-Asian minorities.

I think it has to do with crime/safety/gangs issues. Race is purely incidental and secondary.

137   FunTime   2013 Jul 5, 10:12am  

raindoctor says

Well, conformity = less risk.

When investing, that's not the case though, right? Except I get you're saying less risk because even in a loss, you get an out.

You also end up in a conformed financial status, though. Meaning, you never get ahead. I suppose for most people that's the height of their ambition and being like most other people feel's comfortable. I've always found that terribly uncomfortable and often think of ways to get more autonomy. I realize that's my problem, though! ; )

138   SJ   2013 Jul 5, 3:00pm  

Well right now just sitting on cash as my gut feeling tells me it is not worth it to pay 800k for a crapbox in the area.

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