"3.5" percenter? Is this a meme or an inside joke I haven't caught on to? Why not 1% or 5% or 10%?Another Bear said:
This is true but among the aspiring 3.5%ers where your kid goes to college is about social standing, the parents not the kids.
"3.5" percenter? Is this a meme or an inside joke I haven't caught on to? Why not 1% or 5% or 10%?Another Bear said:
This is true but among the aspiring 3.5%ers where your kid goes to college is about social standing, the parents not the kids.
I'll only speak for the profession I know, but it absolutely matters for your first job after law school (after that, it doesn't matter).71Bear said:It is absolutely true.okaydo said:
It's amazing how true this is. (I'm sure many here will disagree, particularly those with advanced degrees.)
ducky23 said:I'll only speak for the profession I know, but it absolutely matters for your first job after law school (after that, it doesn't matter).71Bear said:It is absolutely true.okaydo said:
It's amazing how true this is. (I'm sure many here will disagree, particularly those with advanced degrees.)
I also imagine that what medical school you go to might determine residency placement.
Odd numbers always gain more attention. Want people to remember something, set an odd number or time.FuzzyWuzzy said:"3.5" percenter? Is this a meme or an inside joke I haven't caught on to? Why not 1% or 5% or 10%?Another Bear said:
This is true but among the aspiring 3.5%ers where your kid goes to college is about social standing, the parents not the kids.
I'm 3 of 5 kids. By the time it got to me the attitude was, "if you're not arrested and get out of here, we're good.". My dad was surprised I got into Cal, didn't think I could. He never told me to my face but my mom mentioned it.okaydo said:Another Bear said:
This is true but among the aspiring 3.5%ers where your kid goes to college is about social standing, the parents not the kids.
1. I'm glad that my parents didn't really have friends. Or high class friends. My dad has no friends. My mom's closest friend was on welfare (who faked her address to send her son to Beverly Hills High).
2. Despite my mom being Asian, she was the opposite of a Tiger mom.
Ouch.BearSD said:
This story is the gift that keeps on giving....
It's a scandal because it is dishonest and is done mostly through phony athletic help. So it takes down the dignity of all those who play it straight. Newport Beach guy named Singer is the go through...$25M involved.UCBerkGrad said:
Why is this a scandal? Elite private schools have been admitting students when daddy donates a new library to the school. Has been happening for 100+ years.
Exactly what I was thinking. Surprised that some of these folks didn't just make the donation and buy a spot. I've had arguments with a lot of people on this issue. Personally, if somebody is willing to donate REAL money - mid to high 8 figures - to a school, then I think there's benefit to the student body as a whole and I have no problem with it. OTOH, when somebody buys a spot with $500K to $1M or so, I don't see how that can pay tuition for another kid or two over the long haul.Sebastabear said:
If you slightly tweaked this scheme and had the money going directly to the universities (as opposed to individual coaches and middlemen) and took out the fake test scores you could literally arrest entire ZIP Codes in Connecticut and the Silicon Valley.
I wonder how easy it is to do this here, given that admissions turns away players in FB and BB that actually play the sport!FuzzyWuzzy said:Ouch.BearSD said:
This story is the gift that keeps on giving....
But I am doing my best not to slide into too much schadenfreude. Scandal can and will come to Cal again at some point. We had the football-academic fraud scandal in the late 90's, a rash of sexual harassment/assault scandals, etc. Admission to Cal is very competitive, our coaches aren't paid that well given the cost of living (and everyone is susceptible to the temptation of money), and rich alums don't have "legal" ways of buying admission for their kids. So all the ingredients are there. You really just need a coach to whom $25,000 looks very tempting and who can make the rationalization, Heck, what's the harm? The kid gets admission, suffers a strange injury like bone spurs, and then they're off the team before the first practice. And then once the coach starts using the extra cash to buy stuff s/he can't really afford, s/he's looking for the next $25K.
100% on this. All you have to do is check the bios in the NY Times and elsewhere and it's always interesting to see that their alma mater is mentioned if it's a sexy school, but isn't if they went to a plan wrap public or private school.OaktownBear said:ducky23 said:I'll only speak for the profession I know, but it absolutely matters for your first job after law school (after that, it doesn't matter).71Bear said:It is absolutely true.okaydo said:
It's amazing how true this is. (I'm sure many here will disagree, particularly those with advanced degrees.)
I also imagine that what medical school you go to might determine residency placement.
Employment statistics demonstrate that it matters a lot. Obviously the more work experience you get, the less your college matters. I tend to think people that say it doesn't matter are just far removed from the time in their lives when it really did.
Further to this, it's also the kids one meets at the top schools. The better the school, the better the network if one chooses to mine those relationships. I can say from personal experience that my UC contacts didn't help me in my business (movie production), but people definitely took notice of my Cal degree on my resume in the early days. Now that I'm established, it's amazing how many other Cal grads I come across and now have a relationship with.juarezbear said:100% on this. All you have to do is check the bios in the NY Times and elsewhere and it's always interesting to see that their alma mater is mentioned if it's a sexy school, but isn't if they went to a plan wrap public or private school.OaktownBear said:ducky23 said:I'll only speak for the profession I know, but it absolutely matters for your first job after law school (after that, it doesn't matter).71Bear said:It is absolutely true.okaydo said:
It's amazing how true this is. (I'm sure many here will disagree, particularly those with advanced degrees.)
I also imagine that what medical school you go to might determine residency placement.
Employment statistics demonstrate that it matters a lot. Obviously the more work experience you get, the less your college matters. I tend to think people that say it doesn't matter are just far removed from the time in their lives when it really did.
It's the kids who get in as PWO's and have decent grades and SATs in all sports. You'd be surprised how many slots there are for PWO's.socaliganbear said:I wonder how easy it is to do this here, given that admissions turns away players in FB and BB that actually play the sport!FuzzyWuzzy said:Ouch.BearSD said:
This story is the gift that keeps on giving....
But I am doing my best not to slide into too much schadenfreude. Scandal can and will come to Cal again at some point. We had the football-academic fraud scandal in the late 90's, a rash of sexual harassment/assault scandals, etc. Admission to Cal is very competitive, our coaches aren't paid that well given the cost of living (and everyone is susceptible to the temptation of money), and rich alums don't have "legal" ways of buying admission for their kids. So all the ingredients are there. You really just need a coach to whom $25,000 looks very tempting and who can make the rationalization, Heck, what's the harm? The kid gets admission, suffers a strange injury like bone spurs, and then they're off the team before the first practice. And then once the coach starts using the extra cash to buy stuff s/he can't really afford, s/he's looking for the next $25K.
FuzzyWuzzy said:Ouch.BearSD said:
This story is the gift that keeps on giving....
But I am doing my best not to slide into too much schadenfreude. Scandal can and will come to Cal again at some point. We had the football-academic fraud scandal in the late 90's, a rash of sexual harassment/assault scandals, etc. Admission to Cal is very competitive, our coaches aren't paid that well given the cost of living (and everyone is susceptible to the temptation of money), and rich alums don't have "legal" ways of buying admission for their kids. So all the ingredients are there. You really just need a coach to whom $25,000 looks very tempting and who can make the rationalization, Heck, what's the harm? The kid gets admission, suffers a strange injury like bone spurs, and then they're off the team before the first practice. And then once the coach starts using the extra cash to buy stuff s/he can't really afford, s/he's looking for the next $25K.
Speaking as someone who was responsible for hiring people into professional positions, I can say unequivocally that the college of choice did not matter. The only question regarding educational background was do you have a degree not where did you attend college. The interviews I conducted confirmed that those with degrees from Cal, Stanford, UCLA, etc. were no better than interviews with candidates from less "elite" schools. It isn't where you went to school, it is what you did after you graduated.OaktownBear said:ducky23 said:I'll only speak for the profession I know, but it absolutely matters for your first job after law school (after that, it doesn't matter).71Bear said:It is absolutely true.okaydo said:
It's amazing how true this is. (I'm sure many here will disagree, particularly those with advanced degrees.)
I also imagine that what medical school you go to might determine residency placement.
Employment statistics demonstrate that it matters a lot. Obviously the more work experience you get, the less your college matters. I tend to think people that say it doesn't matter are just far removed from the time in their lives when it really did.
This is not the current problem but is a scandal that is wrong, and I can assure you it has gone on at Cal as well.juarezbear said:It's the kids who get in as PWO's and have decent grades and SATs in all sports. You'd be surprised how many slots there are for PWO's.socaliganbear said:I wonder how easy it is to do this here, given that admissions turns away players in FB and BB that actually play the sport!FuzzyWuzzy said:Ouch.BearSD said:
This story is the gift that keeps on giving....
But I am doing my best not to slide into too much schadenfreude. Scandal can and will come to Cal again at some point. We had the football-academic fraud scandal in the late 90's, a rash of sexual harassment/assault scandals, etc. Admission to Cal is very competitive, our coaches aren't paid that well given the cost of living (and everyone is susceptible to the temptation of money), and rich alums don't have "legal" ways of buying admission for their kids. So all the ingredients are there. You really just need a coach to whom $25,000 looks very tempting and who can make the rationalization, Heck, what's the harm? The kid gets admission, suffers a strange injury like bone spurs, and then they're off the team before the first practice. And then once the coach starts using the extra cash to buy stuff s/he can't really afford, s/he's looking for the next $25K.
Well, I have always used 32%, ever since I found out my family's wealth just barely made the cut for "top third".FuzzyWuzzy said:"3.5" percenter? Is this a meme or an inside joke I haven't caught on to? Why not 1% or 5% or 10%?Another Bear said:
This is true but among the aspiring 3.5%ers where your kid goes to college is about social standing, the parents not the kids.
Spot on. Cal actually audits the hell out of this and the administrators are incredibly paranoid about even the appearance of favoritism to children of donors. I know they also look closely at the teams to see if the kids recruited as PWOs wind up playing. They definitely count them against the roster spots the coach can have - something other schools don't do.juarezbear said:Exactly what I was thinking. Surprised that some of these folks didn't just make the donation and buy a spot. I've had arguments with a lot of people on this issue. Personally, if somebody is willing to donate REAL money - mid to high 8 figures - to a school, then I think there's benefit to the student body as a whole and I have no problem with it. OTOH, when somebody buys a spot with $500K to $1M or so, I don't see how that can pay tuition for another kid or two over the long haul.Sebastabear said:
If you slightly tweaked this scheme and had the money going directly to the universities (as opposed to individual coaches and middlemen) and took out the fake test scores you could literally arrest entire ZIP Codes in Connecticut and the Silicon Valley.
Sebasta would know more than I would, but my sense is that since Cal is a public school, it's much more difficult to buy a spot since there's supposed to be more transparency on the admissions process.
How about brothers and sisters of student athletes who have played at Cal getting PWOs?Sebastabear said:Spot on. Cal actually audits the hell out of this and the administrators are incredibly paranoid about even the appearance of favoritism to children of donors. I know they also look closely at the teams to see if the kids recruited as PWOs wind up playing. They definitely count them against the roster spots the coach can have - something other schools don't do.juarezbear said:Exactly what I was thinking. Surprised that some of these folks didn't just make the donation and buy a spot. I've had arguments with a lot of people on this issue. Personally, if somebody is willing to donate REAL money - mid to high 8 figures - to a school, then I think there's benefit to the student body as a whole and I have no problem with it. OTOH, when somebody buys a spot with $500K to $1M or so, I don't see how that can pay tuition for another kid or two over the long haul.Sebastabear said:
If you slightly tweaked this scheme and had the money going directly to the universities (as opposed to individual coaches and middlemen) and took out the fake test scores you could literally arrest entire ZIP Codes in Connecticut and the Silicon Valley.
Sebasta would know more than I would, but my sense is that since Cal is a public school, it's much more difficult to buy a spot since there's supposed to be more transparency on the admissions process.
Was your mom's friend Andrea Zuckerman's mom?okaydo said:Another Bear said:
This is true but among the aspiring 3.5%ers where your kid goes to college is about social standing, the parents not the kids.
1. I'm glad that my parents didn't really have friends. Or high class friends. My dad has no friends. My mom's closest friend was on welfare (who faked her address to send her son to Beverly Hills High).
2. Despite my mom being Asian, she was the opposite of a Tiger mom.
One is transparent and discussed. The other is a crime.FuzzyWuzzy said:This is liberal whataboutism. Two wrongs don't make a right.OneTopOneChickenApple said:
I always bring up this kind of stuff when people argue against Affirmative Action.
Quote:
One of Silicon Valley's most prominent private equity investors and one of the tech sector's leading proponents of how to invest ethically and for social impact has been charged in an explosive college admissions scandal that was revealed Tuesday, March 12.
Prosecutors charged Bill McGlashan, a founder and managing partner at TPG Growth which has made landmark investments in companies like Uber and Airbnb on fraud allegations for trying to engineer the admission of his son to the University of Southern California.
Dumb but I think other things are driving things. For one, social standing for the PARENTS. Also it's LA. UCLA is a nice place on the Westside. It's a nice and safe place to visit...as opposed to USC. Very comfortable for the elite to visit and not feel icky or grossed out, like say in Berkeley.MiZery said:
how dumb does your daughter have to be for the mom to pay them 500,000 just to be admitted to that school.
Regardless of what you think about the path Zach Maynard took to Cal, what's indisputable is that he was our starting quarterback. Not equivalent to this situation at all.OdontoBear66 said:How about brothers and sisters of student athletes who have played at Cal getting PWOs?Sebastabear said:Spot on. Cal actually audits the hell out of this and the administrators are incredibly paranoid about even the appearance of favoritism to children of donors. I know they also look closely at the teams to see if the kids recruited as PWOs wind up playing. They definitely count them against the roster spots the coach can have - something other schools don't do.juarezbear said:Exactly what I was thinking. Surprised that some of these folks didn't just make the donation and buy a spot. I've had arguments with a lot of people on this issue. Personally, if somebody is willing to donate REAL money - mid to high 8 figures - to a school, then I think there's benefit to the student body as a whole and I have no problem with it. OTOH, when somebody buys a spot with $500K to $1M or so, I don't see how that can pay tuition for another kid or two over the long haul.Sebastabear said:
If you slightly tweaked this scheme and had the money going directly to the universities (as opposed to individual coaches and middlemen) and took out the fake test scores you could literally arrest entire ZIP Codes in Connecticut and the Silicon Valley.
Sebasta would know more than I would, but my sense is that since Cal is a public school, it's much more difficult to buy a spot since there's supposed to be more transparency on the admissions process.
MiZery said:
how dumb does your daughter have to be for the mom to pay them 500,000 just to be admitted to that school.