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Originally Posted by yankeeyosh
Yep...same here. Granted, I have a job, but it's really just an entry level job for a bachelor's degree person who majored in finance...maybe...MAYBE a teeny bit above it. And yet, I have a master's degree with an Ivy League education...and I have seven years' professional experience. Yet I see people who are complete buffoons with less education/experience and who are years younger than me are managers or directors (I AM NOT SAYING I EXPECT TO BE ONE OF THOSE RIGHT NOW...just making a point). The thing is the job market's a complete crapshoot. Even if you're Einstein, you're not guaranteed a job. Everything rides on how well you can interview.
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I have news. Employers don't care if you went to an Ivy League school, and they pretty much don't care if you have a masters. A person with a simple bachelors degree from an unknown state university has the same opportunities as someone with a masters from an Ivy League school.
No one is guarenteed a job. Many of the unemployed and underemployed people in this country have very good degrees from very good schools. Things such as good grades and graduate degrees and experience at highly ranked schools may matter (and do) in the academic world. But in the real world, none of this matters. What employers care about is if you can help them make money. In that respect, I would think that a working class kid who got through college with decent grades (at least a 3.0 GPA) from an unknown state university and "only" has a bachelors degree would be someone I would hire over a kid who has never worked a day in his life, and whose parents paid their way through Harvard for a bachelors and a masters.