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Lou Tamposi's avatar

This was terrific. And though I’m not yet thinking about college for my own kids, I talk to a lot of current college students about their transitions into the “real world.” Freshman and sophomores who are worried that they’re not doing “the right” internships or taking “the wrong” classes. I tell them this: when I’m hiring an intern or someone at the entry level, I’d rather they show me a deep and real level of intellectual curiosity — not just that they’ve “checked a box.” I’d rather they have spent a summer working on a farm (or in a trade), hiking, building, or teaching than if they had spent it sitting behind a computer in an office pecking away at a spreadsheet with no real ramifications.

My gut tells me that while certain places still require passing through the “prestige” gates, more and more frequently — and especially with the increasing use of AI — the “real” experience will vastly outweigh the manufactured. I want my own children to be well-worked, not just well-polished — and I’m willing to wager that even if that doesn’t result in “the right” college, they’ll be much more well-oriented for whatever comes next.

Nancy E. Holroyd, RN's avatar

We are years after the rush up to college for any of our girls. But the checklists and "the prescribed approach" to getting into college was very much in place in the early 2000 when our oldest was in high school. Our advice to her was start with selecting 3 colleges--a sure bet (our local state university), a pretty sure bet, and a reach college. The reach college was the one she had her heart set on. A pricey private engineering school. We told her not to worry about the finance as we felt her possibility for scholarship help was high enough. She got in, graduated in 4 years and took a fork in the road and went to seminary afterwards. Not originally in her plans at all.

It worked so well for her, we gave her younger sister (by six years), the same advice. She ended up only applying to 2 colleges--her reach was Harvard--she was waited listed (and eventually offered a slot). The other college was one that she had already been offered a scholarship from them at the end of her junior year of high school. It also had a far better aligned music degree than Harvard. She was planning on ethnomusicology. The University of Rochester had Eastman Music School access as well as their own music courses. Also, it had the added benefit of legacy status as her dad, his dad, and numerous other uncles, etc., had all attended there.

Bottom line, we provided the roots and let them fly via the wings they developed over the years. They found their own "better fit."

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