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by jshowa3
2610 days ago
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I never said there wasn't a difference. What I said was that the content you're taught is no different than what is taught at a school that accepts more people.
Calculus doesn't change whether you go to Ivy or low tier. It's the same material. What it means is that you get more opportunities. And literally, nobody cares once you get to the working world which is what the majority of people go to college for. In fact, the longer you work, the less your degree is even considered. Degrees only provide more opportunity and help get your foot in the door a lot easier. Also, you're competing with all the other 1% so it wouldn't be a shocker if you didn't get in. Nearly everyone applying to those schools will have perfect grades, SAT/ACT scores, and extra-curriculars. Plus special interest applicants such as sports players, rich people, and disadvantaged minorities. The OP doesn't even mention how many times he applied. And now he publishes a web page with the entire goal of being condescending toward everyone else and acting like he deserves to get everything he wants. Its like he's never learned the greatest lesson of life, that it's horribly unfair. |
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I have doubts. The DS&A classes in top schools are probably better than mine and according to people I've met at top schools they make studying for tech interviews easy. They don't need to study Leetcode problems, they just need to study for their tests.
>Also, you're competing with all the other 1% so it wouldn't be a shocker if you didn't get in.
Obviously, but it implies if you don't get into any of the top schools that you're not 1%.