<p>uc benz: thats what the graduate students are doing after graduation, I think he's looking for one for what grad schools a typical NU student would consider/ where most are going or getting in to.</p>
<p>I wish more schools offered such information. Most do not have that kind of information readily availlable.</p>
<p>TheCity: it is not what graduate students are doing. It specifically says UNDERgraduate students. It is basically what the MIT website gives just in a less organized format. </p>
<p>I think tenisgh's website is for graduate because Northwestern doesn't offer majors like accounting, finance, marketing, etc. for undergraduate students. Looking over it, I don't think an undergraduate economics major could go on to be an assistant professor at Harvard.</p>
<p>Uc_Benz, how can it be a graduate student survey when they have students pursuing Masters at other schools?? How can a graduate student be in Teach for America when the program recruits recent college (undergraduate) grads??? Please look at the link AGAIN! That is a undergraduate survey.</p>
<p>It is very well possible that students at Northwestern apply for graduate schools (Masters of Arts, Masters of Science, JD, Ph.D, etc.) Again, under the list of Economics, why would someone who becomes an Assistant Professor get their Ph.D. from University of Chicago, Uc_benz? This is a Northwestern undergrad alumni survey.</p>
<p><a href="http://www.northwestern.edu/careers/Graduation_Survey/firstdest1.htm#aas%5B/url%5D">http://www.northwestern.edu/careers/Graduation_Survey/firstdest1.htm#aas</a></p>
<p>I don't know what you are looking at, but it specifiically says "Assistant Professor, Harvard University."</p>
<p>Anyways, I think we are both right. It obviously has some graduate responses from Kellogg because it is impossible to get a degree in any of the fields of business as an undergraduate. Also, some of the responses are from associates in investment banking, and it is also impossible to get that position out of undergraduate. And there are some undergraduate responses pertaining to law/medical school and other positions such as financial analyst.</p>
<p>Because that person who is an Assistant Professor pursued their Ph.D. from Harvard but received their undergraduate education at Northwestern. That is how you are suppose to read the list.</p>
<p>Hence "Graduate School, Degree Pursued"</p>
<p>You're looking at something totally different. This person got their Ph.D. in economics from Northwestern and was hired as an assistant professor at Harvard. </p>
<p>Hence "Employment - Job Title" </p>
<p>"Graduate School, Degree Pursued" means they haven't gotten their advanced degree yet, and they are going to graduate school.</p>
<p>"Employment - Job Title" means that they have either gotten their undergraduate degree or advanced degree, and they are entering the workforce. And in this case it has to be an advanced degree because no one on the face of the Earth is going to be a professor at Harvard with an undergraduate degree.</p>