Started By
Message
re: What SEC school is on par with an ivy league education?
Posted on 8/24/16 at 4:13 pm to Les Miles Lunchbox
Posted on 8/24/16 at 4:13 pm to Les Miles Lunchbox
You want my true thoughts? IVY league is all about the contacts you make.
I am a CPA who works for a company located in New York with plenty of IVY league grads, and their coursework and classes in Accounting where the same as mine at LSU. There is only so much you can do with certain majors.........
So you are getting laughed at, but there are multiple majors at universities that are "on par" with Ivys
I am a CPA who works for a company located in New York with plenty of IVY league grads, and their coursework and classes in Accounting where the same as mine at LSU. There is only so much you can do with certain majors.........
So you are getting laughed at, but there are multiple majors at universities that are "on par" with Ivys
This post was edited on 8/24/16 at 4:20 pm
Posted on 8/24/16 at 4:30 pm to lsupride87
Accounting isn't historically part of a liberal arts education. The Ivies were originally about liberal arts education. That is one of the biggest "on par" distinctions.
If you can take the same accounting coursework at an Ivy as you do at a big public education, the big public school is probably not doing its job.
I have a kid who got a masters in accounting, but unfortunately, they went to a liberal arts school and had to do a whole bunch of accounting catch up after they got their undergrad because their liberal arts school simply didn't offer enough accounting classes.
Accounting is a trade. To Ivy League educators, you get that when you go to a trade school (business). You learn about numbers after you get a liberal arts education.
If you can take the same accounting coursework at an Ivy as you do at a big public education, the big public school is probably not doing its job.
I have a kid who got a masters in accounting, but unfortunately, they went to a liberal arts school and had to do a whole bunch of accounting catch up after they got their undergrad because their liberal arts school simply didn't offer enough accounting classes.
Accounting is a trade. To Ivy League educators, you get that when you go to a trade school (business). You learn about numbers after you get a liberal arts education.
This post was edited on 8/24/16 at 4:31 pm
Back to top
Follow SECRant for SEC Football News