sebastian_dangerfield |
12-16-2024 12:47 PM |
Re: Implanting Bill Gates's Micro-chips In Brains For Over 20 Years!
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I don't understand what you are suggesting or arguing, so maybe you could explain.
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I'm advocating that colleges and universities manage themselves (and their costs and elective expenditures) more efficiently.
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I don't see any loss of brand status or perceived ROI among selective private institutions. The selective ones are only getting harder to get into.
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An aggregate brand degradation, no, but that does appear probable down the road. What we're seeing here (and yes, of course YMMV) is a calculation, even by families that can easily afford to pay elite private school tuition, that it's just not worth it.
For some reason, as I said, southern and big state schools seem to be attracting kids I'd otherwise expect to be going Lesser Ivies, Patriot League, etc.
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Your answer here implies that you think public schools are acting like profit-maximizing businesses in trying to grow, but I thought we just agreed with Scott Galloway that that's not how those administrations are acting.
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Galloway also argues that schools are limiting enrollment to goose prestige. I think state schools are doing this now as well.
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I grew up in the Northeast and live in California now, and the two areas are dramatically different in attitudes towards public schools. In the East, the best schools are almost all private schools, and the college admissions game is a process of sorting out the status ranking of the various schools and then where you as an applicant fit in that hierarchy. In California, there just aren't that many private schools, and most people are much less hung up on the status significance of the choice. Also, it's much more common to go to a two-year school and then transfer to a UC.
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I think the west is a much more healthy environment in this regard. The push to get one's kids into exclusive east coast private schools has created a really coarse environment. When you aim that many avariciously aspirant professionals at the same goal (getting junior into Dartmouth), you get a horrid set of behaviors and an emphasis on gamesmanship. You also create some seriously stressed kids.
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