Students who don’t really know what they want to do still won’t know in 10 years even if they went to a prestigious college.
I’m really not sure that’s the case. It seems to me that people who attend prestigious colleges are likely to be exposed to a broader range of interests and opportunities than they otherwise would, giving them more of a chance of finding something that they want to do.
I guess I don’t have a big enough example set to know. Anyone know of studies done on this that try to separate variables like conscientiousness/work ethic and ambition from actual college attendance? (Given that there’s an expectation, in the US anyway, that smart, hardworking, ambitious kids will go to prestigious colleges and the rest won’t.)
I’m really not sure that’s the case. It seems to me that people who attend prestigious colleges are likely to be exposed to a broader range of interests and opportunities than they otherwise would, giving them more of a chance of finding something that they want to do.
I guess I don’t have a big enough example set to know. Anyone know of studies done on this that try to separate variables like conscientiousness/work ethic and ambition from actual college attendance? (Given that there’s an expectation, in the US anyway, that smart, hardworking, ambitious kids will go to prestigious colleges and the rest won’t.)