<p>To be very short and brief, No. Validation of my theory is found by interviewing 10 people and seeing how many say their career opportunities were affected by the college attended</p>
<p>Does choice of college matter in the long run?</p>
<p>Wow what a generic question.</p>
<p>Yes and No.</p>
<p>It just depends how you make of your future. Nobody has a crystal ball to predict things, but to put things into perspective, as an ex-executive search headhunter who helps senior executives find jobs, I can guarantee you nobody really cares about where these guys graduated from, rather it is what they have achieved during thier years of work experience.</p>
<p>Probably will if u ask me</p>
<p>@Mak my math sat prep teacher got a degree in math at cornell. And now hes a tutor at a yoyee center with no girlfriend and the pay is not even big enough. Hes been working there for 4 years and still doesnt have the salary to go back to cornell for his masters. Was that cornell degree worth it?Hell no he turn out to be arrogant fool that believes hes more intelligent then anyone else all because he went to cornell. Loads of arrogancy that comes from these student graduating from these ivy league and a load of them fail to get a job. If that was the case,then why would bill and mike quit harvard college?Oh that right because they use their own skills instead. It what you do that matter, not the name on that paper. Amy chua got a degree in economics and biochemistry she now a author… That is completely useless. Some of the ceo at some of fortune 500 companies even claim “it didnt matter at all,I only went to harvard because I didnt wanted to wasted my stats” Going to harvard or ivy league should be natural and should be who you are not a sense of accomplishment.</p>