Originally posted by: chizow
Well here's the deal: You can still get an excellent job out of a major state university if you do well. There are however, firms like McKinsey & Co., Booz Allen, AT Kearney etc. that ONLY recruit out of the Ivy League for undergrad and Top 25 for grads. The situation is similar on the Tech/Engineering/Science disciplines.
Exactly. That is the reason I attend a Top 15 University.
And for other people's info (e.g. the thread starter), if you get the external/internal scholarships right, you can be like me and pay $6k/yr to go to a Top 15 university

. A little less than your $10k/yr state school

.
Anyway, I could have gone to my state school. But the reason I applied to schools in the Ivy League (Cornell, Brown) and to schools with de facto Ivy League status (Rice, Johns Hopkins, Stanford) is for both networking and for the experience: beautiful campuses surrounded by very intelligent people (granted, you'll find this elsewhere, but the proportion of intellectuals you find at prestigious schools is much greater). I'm only a freshman, but I've gotten as much of an education from my peers as I have from the books.
Also, the school I chose to attend was because of its size and the oppurtunities it provided; I could be given excellent attention from my professors, as well as garner research/internship oppurtunities as early as freshman year, which is very valuable in the long-run.
Living in a highly meritocratic society, a prestigious school is a boon to one's future, in my opinion. Of course, you can be just as successful or moreso from a non-prestigious school, but a prestigious school gets your foot in the right door a little earlier. And if you're interested in grad/law/med school, it doesn't hurt that your school has a 75% admissions rate into one's top choice grad/med/law school.
Cost shouldn't be a factor in where one decides to attent college. All the top schools now have need-blind admission, and will do their best to provide you with the means to pay for the education. I know plenty of people who couldn't afford to go to top schools (and parents wouldn't pay), but they're paying $3k a year right now...a lot of schools now cap the amount they can provide in loans, so you are guarunteed much less of a debt than in the past when you graduate. If you need more than the loans provide, you get it all in generous grants.