May 13, 2008
Filed Under (blog posts) by elroy on 13-05-2008

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U of Toledo shieldAt my current client, a large grocery company, our 19-year-old intern just went back to school. He was a highly motivated, intelligent, hard-working, socially awkward employee. The IT project manager really liked him and tried to convince him to come back next summer and after he graduated. The intern wouldn’t even take a loaner laptop to work part-time from school. I heard he vowed never to return to this company again.

According to some of my co-workers, he probably could have quit school and taken a full time job. They proceeded to name several manager level employees who don’t have a college degree.

What’s the point?

The intern currently attends the University of Toledo. I don’t know what the school’s national rankings are but I would bet it is at most a regional stand out. How many people in Colorado are thinking, “I hope I get into U of Toledo”? I’d guess not many.

So, does it matter if you go to Harvard or Missouri College in St. Louis as long as you get a good internship?

You’re probably thinking, the college you attend determines where you can get an internship. That may be true, but if you are intelligent and apply to enough good internships, you’re bound to get a few responses. Then, impress your employer and the sky is the limit. What’s more important, the classes you take at school or the experience you gained actually working? I vote for your internship experience.

There is probably a glass ceiling if you don’t have a college education. I’m not advocating quitting school to take a full-time job. But, a manager in this grocery chain (top 10% of the S&P 500) probably makes at least $100K a year. That’s nothing to sneeze at when you are living in suburban middle America and not a major city with a high cost of living. You could always finish your degree while you work (requires lots of motivation).

So, is it worth spending an arm and a leg and going into several years of debt to attend a highly ranked college? Or can you do just as well finding a good internship or two, working hard, and not have to be paying for school at the age of 30?

Full disclosure: I went to a highly ranked public college which my parents paid for. Also, I was lazy and didn’t have any true internships while at school. The above opinions are mine and mine alone.

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September 26, 2007
Filed Under (Uncategorized) by elroy on 26-09-2007

Harvard lawyers have denounced the Harvard bookstore’s pratices of throwing students out and calling the cops on them.

Its about time. Link to the article:
LINK

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September 25, 2007
Filed Under (Uncategorized) by elroy on 25-09-2007

barnes_noble Harvard Bookstore ridiculousness continues...In a previous post, I highlighted how the Harvard bookstore was kicking students out for writing down textbooks ISBNs in the store.
Apparently, they have taken it one step further. Now, they are calling the cops on students instead. Seriously?

According to the article, the two officers let the students continue to copy down ISBNs for two and a half hours before the students left on the own. The Cambridge Police Department said it removed three of four males, but that hasn’t been confirmed by any of the students collecting data.

Where are the Harvard Law School students to bring the bookstore back to earth?

Link to the summary in :
LINK

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September 19, 2007
Filed Under (Uncategorized) by elroy on 19-09-2007

harvard Harvard bookstore throwing out students...…for taking too many notes. They don’t want them to learn?
The article (from Boing Boing) highlights how students are taking copious notes about the prices of books at the campus bookstore. Apparently, the nerds up at Harvard like to take notes before they even own the book….
But, seriously, if they write down the book info, such as the ISDN, they are being booted from the store because the Barnes and Noble run bookstore says the prices are its “intellectual property”. I’m sure I don’t have to tell anyone that it seems like a totally invalid claim.

Maybe if they lowered their prices, they wouldn’t have students writing down the book information and then buying it online for cheaper, either new or used. College bookstores are a notorious rip off. I think I bought one book my second semester sophomore year and paid someone a few bucks to borrow some of the other ones.
The article highlights a website that shows the books for Harvard courses:
crimsonreading.org

Either way, half.com or Amazon work too.

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