barrett wrote:
Brandeis is certainly not a slouchy school but point well taken.
That's exactly the point. "Settling" for slightly less than the best keeps you in range of schools that are still very good. Whatever level of school you can get into, the schools a tier or two below are likely to still be almost as good.
barrett wrote:
I do think though that a lot of people value the prestige of certain school. I guess the real question here is whether or not that translates into a better career.
It's largely dependent on a couple of factors, I think. My experience is that upper-middle-class east coast baby boomer college professors put the most weight on the "prestige" of one's college pedigree. The fewer of those traits are true, the less a person will care. I can tell you that nobody under the age of about 35 or who has been in the workforce for more than a few years really gives a crap.
barrett wrote:
PS, you seem extremely self-possessed and would probably do fine at Pudunk, graduate and get a good job.
Thanks.

Believe it or not, I actually squandered a lot of my time in college (at a very expensive and prestigious school, no less) and graduated with no friends and a lot of debt, and my career success is due entirely to the things I did outside of college; the name of my school was actually an albatross around my neck when I was applying for jobs. My point is that it's not a question of Yale vs Oklahoma City trade school. It may be a question of Yale vs Colby. "Settling" for Colby instead of attending Yale is likely to not make a whit of difference unless you aspire to enter one of the few fields where your degree really does matter for life, like law, and especially law within the government.
barrett wrote:
What I think happens in a lot of cases though is that a kid will pull themselves up to a higher level based on what expectations are. One of the factors in forming these expectations is attending a prestigious school.
That's often true, but extremely high expectations can also lead to an unhealthy inferiority complex and a set of unrealistic self-expectations. Eventually a person has to develop a sense of self-esteem and some self-expectations based on their own personality and goals, and not the expectations of others. Doing this in college can often lead to an awful lot of expensive wasted time. This is the "time to find yourself!" that many talk about, but I think it's bull. I went to a school where everybody there was finding themselves and wasting a ridiculous amount of other people's money in the process of becoming borderline unemployable. Avoid the hippie schools…

Human behavior is economic behavior. The particulars may vary, but competition for limited resources remains a constant.
- CEO Nwabudike Morgan