<p>title is pretty self explanatory. im a boy btw.</p>
<p>Depends... but I would say business casual: khakis and dress shirt?</p>
<p>Depends on the location. If it's at a workplace, (probably) formal. At a home or Starbucks or something like that, just go with business casual.</p>
<p>just wear a suit :D</p>
<p>It also depends on the school and location. For the only interview I've had so far, I wore dark jeans and a nice shirt (I'm a girl) and didn't feel underdressed at all. But we met at a coffee shop and it's a pretty casual school.</p>
<p>well my interviewer said to not bother about "coats and ties" as he is not too hung up about it. and I'm going to his office for my interview . just don't be.. unkempt :)</p>
<p>For my interview with a Duke alumni at Starbucks, I just wore a t-shirt and shorts (it's always hot in Florida). I didn't feel under dressed at all, the interviewer was wearing shorts and a button up shirt.</p>
<p>Well, my best of luck to antsoft but you should assume business casual at a bare minimum. Slacks/khakis and a collared shirt (dress shirt or polo/golf shirt) for men.</p>
<p>While your interviewer may be more casually dressed than you, don't assume that he/she might not have a subconscious bias against someone who treats an interview so casually. Again, community standards might be the standard but why risk it?</p>
<p>A collared shirt (polo or button-down) and non-jean pants. Some people still don't accept jeans as appropriate for stuff like that, and even if you don't think it's that big of a deal, just be safe. I'd go with corduroys or khakis.</p>
<p>I am an alumni interviewer for a top 50 LAC, and I really don't mind what students wear. Most do show up in casual wear, if they wear jeans it is with a nice sweater or polo. Even though it is the style sometimes, if you wear jeans they should not be the torn kind...</p>
<p>polo and khakis</p>