From Princeton, around 100 entered IB, around 60 entered "other financial services," and around 50 entered consulting (in the past, up to 90 per class have entered consulting, don't know why it's dropped since then). Class size is ~1200.

 
Best Response
pepsiholic:
According to the NYT, a third of Princeton undergrads went into finance.

http://www.nytimes.com/2010/12/26/business/26excerpt.html?pagewanted=2&…

(Not that randombetch is wrong. Just offering another data point.)

Hmm we get this packet called "Grading at Princeton" which explains the effects of grade deflation and how it's not hurting our job chances, and it explicitly lists the actual numbers of students who went into law, medicine, IB, other finance, consulting, non-profit, etc.

Also, NYT has screwed up other numbers before. They ran a story on grade deflation and published that our average GPA is 3.4, which is not true (that's our median GPA, our average is a 3.28 since the GPA distribution is negatively skewed).

monetarist001:
That NYT article says "A third of the 2009 Princeton graduates who got jobs after graduation went into finance"; in other words, it excludes those who enter graduate/professional schools after graduation. If 100 + 60 = 160 is the total number for finance, then 160 x 3 = 480 is the number of those who got jobs after graduation, which is 480 / 1200 = 40% of the class. That would mean 60% of the class enter graduate/professional schools or travel or simply take a break. That 60% number is a little on the high side. May have to do with the economy.

Oh, that explains everything lol. Should have read this before posting.

I found the thing by the way: http://www.princeton.edu/odoc/faculty/grading/faq/

On average, about 150 go to finance each year. Keep in mind that around 20% still aren't employed by graduation time. I guess if half of them ended up going into finance, then around 1/3 of Princeton kids go into either finance or consulting, but that's quite a stretch. NYT sucks.

From the tables: 142+101+82+19+27+278= 650 who work or want to work when they graduate. 113 went on year-long fellowships 147 went to grad school 123 went to med school Probably around 70 went to law school

Adds up to 1110, so 90 did something unknown or just weren't counted.

Since Princeton has a smaller class size, but is slightly more conservative than Harvard/Yale/Stanford, I'd guess around 150-200 kids from each of those school enter finance as well. ILONELYGUY had a really great estimate IMO.

 

OP, i think someone sent this around before, but I'll repost...

Penn does a nice job of reporting career decisions via survey results. See link here:

http://www.vpul.upenn.edu/careerservices/undergrad/reports.html

You'll see from each year and each undergraduate school who went where and what they were paid. They cut the information in interesting ways -- in terms of people going into finance, be sure to combine figures from all the undergraduate schools.

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