<p>Hahaha i had this thought. For kids that do attend ivy league schools, whether they are still attenting, graduated, w.e. Dose it actually hurt attenting one? Seriously, Ivy Leauges we all know what they are, who they represent, that those that attend, accepted, or graduated are the best of the best. But can it hurt? For example, when entering the workforce, would it be hard to stand out as a ivy league student against lets say.... 10 other ivy league students and a student from a typical college? In any circumstance where its a multitude of diverse students (Brown, UPenn, Harvard, Yale) compared to students from other schools ( Penn State, NYU, Texas A&M, Hunter, Michigan to name a few), dosent it seem that the ivies would be grouped all together?These non ivy league schools are more common for carrying a more diverse body of students, which isnt the case with the ivy league. I was thinking that mabye ivies have this thing for putting their students under a very "generic" steryotype of superb intelligence and achievement that would be hard to let go of when entering the real world. OF COURSE its good to be known for intelligence. But we all know this world dose anything but fully rely on smarts, so do you think that it can hurt when it comes to showing more than intelligence?</p>
<p>Punctuation and grammar fail. Sorry, I got distracted.</p>
<p>lol senioritis, let me get away with it hahaha</p>