Then fuxxing lower the tuition for everyone if according to your news most students are subsidized to boot with. Reserve special grants for truly gifted and hard working applicants who could otherwise not attend for financial reasons.
For example, I sit, laugh, talk, do sports, and spend time with all sorts of people at my local church, some of which are regional Asian managers of global corporations, investment banks, law firms, some are well known surgeons, others are students or do janitorial like work. Diverse, edifying, uplifting, interesting and fun to be with types of people. If i asked anyone for help with a job at their firms they would not hesitate a second to introduce me. I doubt they even know which grad school I attended or whether they remember should I have ever mentioned it, which I don't recall. It's what we make out of life ourselves. Sure you can build a great network at bschool but you get the same network free of charge outside school if you are a driven and outgoing person. But maybe a few with 200k in their pockets are not driven or outgoing. Maybe then bschool makes perfect sense. Or some want to "reboot their careers" as you put it. Makes we wonder why having to reboot? Because they ran down their prior career or made wrong choices?
Back to the original discussion point, yes we would need to disagree I guess. Everything you stated an MBA gave your wife, she could also have gotten outside school and I am confident she can in fact. Except of course that shiny, blinky certificate on the wall and the non verbal admiration and respect such degree bestows on us lucky ones.
For example, I sit, laugh, talk, do sports, and spend time with all sorts of people at my local church, some of which are regional Asian managers of global corporations, investment banks, law firms, some are well known surgeons, others are students or do janitorial like work. Diverse, edifying, uplifting, interesting and fun to be with types of people. If i asked anyone for help with a job at their firms they would not hesitate a second to introduce me. I doubt they even know which grad school I attended or whether they remember should I have ever mentioned it, which I don't recall. It's what we make out of life ourselves. Sure you can build a great network at bschool but you get the same network free of charge outside school if you are a driven and outgoing person. But maybe a few with 200k in their pockets are not driven or outgoing. Maybe then bschool makes perfect sense. Or some want to "reboot their careers" as you put it. Makes we wonder why having to reboot? Because they ran down their prior career or made wrong choices?
Back to the original discussion point, yes we would need to disagree I guess. Everything you stated an MBA gave your wife, she could also have gotten outside school and I am confident she can in fact. Except of course that shiny, blinky certificate on the wall and the non verbal admiration and respect such degree bestows on us lucky ones.
This seems like the same rantings you did at volpunter.
The conversation was about what one person can get out of an MBA program. You stated that it's pointless outside of a transactional degree and I disagreed.
Regarding elites, etc. Very few people pay full tuition. And that rarely affects admission decisions, especially at the ivy caliber schools. Most students get scholarships, low interest loans, and student jobs. Notoriety helps but that only applies to very few applicants (like the Obama children). But none of this has to do with the original discussion point.
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