TE
科技回声
首页24小时热榜最新最佳问答展示工作
GitHubTwitter
首页

科技回声

基于 Next.js 构建的科技新闻平台,提供全球科技新闻和讨论内容。

GitHubTwitter

首页

首页最新最佳问答展示工作

资源链接

HackerNews API原版 HackerNewsNext.js

© 2025 科技回声. 版权所有。

Columbia University Ranking Scandal

4 点作者 As_You_Wish超过 2 年前

1 comment

As_You_Wish超过 2 年前
Should VC and other businesses rate those who go to the lowest cost public universities highest?<p>From a business perspective, who is more intelligent, the person who pays $350,000 to get a degree from Harvard or Colombia (regardless of if they get grants or don&#x27;t pay because of income levels), or if someone purposefully goes to something like in California public universities where residents can go to a local community college for 2 years to get the general education out of the way either for free (parents make less than about $40K&#x2F;year) up costs to about $2000 or so for 2 years, then go to California State University where tuition is $11,500 for 2 years, and get a degree for about $13,000-ish for 4 years. Room and board - you can go to a university in your area for free if you live with parents. If not, there are many super inexpensive areas in California, believe it or not. You can get a share rentals for $400&#x2F;month. Not the big metro areas, of course, but places like Bakersfield, Humbolt, Fresno, Stanislaus, Chico state universities.<p>Didn&#x27;t someone who got a business degree for $13,000 show better business skills than someone who paid $350,000 for essentially the same exact thing? Same thing, because take macro-economics, for example. Let&#x27;s get real. How much better is an macro-ecomics class going to be at Harvard than any other low-cost public university, or a community college? There&#x27;s no way Harvard students in that class are going to learn that much more. A community college can even use the same exact textbook as Harvard for <i>their</i> students.<p>Getting a degree for the lowest amount possible should be the very first criteria to evaluate anyone you are going to hire, or person whose company a VC is going to fund. If someone pays $350,000 for a 4 year degree when they could have gone to a public university where the <i>public</i> pays for part of the educational costs, those $350,000 tuition people are not qualified for making business decisions. Stanford grads...good bye. Harvard or other ivy leagues...see ya.<p>Also, everyone knows you go to those schools for &quot;contacts&quot; so that&#x27;s not an argument. I&#x27;m talking about when a business evaluates a prospective hire or a VC company funding a person, not &quot;contacts&quot;.<p>What do you think? Is the person paying $350,000 for a business degree, or $13,000 for a business degree - which decision is a better business decision, given that two people are about the same in talent?
评论 #32818922 未加载