Quality is not the same as reputation, though the two are, one suspects, highly, correlated. But as PP said, reputation is pretty objective because its a summary of what people think about a school. That's very easy to measure, and in many cases so obvious it doesn't need any measuring. If you think GWU has a better reputation than, say, Harvard (or JHU or many others, for that matter) than you are totally delusional. |
I agree with this. OP should be proud of the fact that she has done so well despite going to a shitty school - it is a testament to her abilities. When she seeks to defend said shitty school, it only calls her judgement into question. |
No, actually, the fact is a majority of people have no clue what that is, and majority of those who do, think its a mediocre school. Only personally invested minority disagrees. Add that all up, and you get a school that is widely seen as a mediocre school. |
| Yeah, we're gonna need a cite for that. |
Obviously this person is disgruntled with life. And my hunch is he/she was reject. Get over it...move on. Get therapy! |
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http://www.washingtonpost.com/sf/feature/wp/2013/04/11/the-education-issue-george-washington-university-fights-its-rich-kid-reputation/
The Education Issue: George Washington University fights its rich-kid reputation On a weekday night, downtown Washington is quiet but for the music blasting out of Cities, a club on 19th Street. The bar is packed with college students, some of whom paid $600 to $1,000 to reserve a table with bottle service of premium vodka and champagne. Many are from nearby George Washington University, which, six years after its tuition clocked in as the most expensive in the country, has acquired an unwelcome image as a magnet school for East Coast wealth. Whether it’s deserved or not, fair or not, GW seems stuck with a “Great Gatsby” reputation. In the New York Times recently, the Foggy Bottom school of 25,000 was dismissed by a former student as a “giant party school with a bunch of rich kids.” |
Reject? Is there even such a thing at GWU?
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| GWU I guess is like Marshall HS - the school that strives too much? |
So, where did you go to school? |
I went to CMU (I am that PP). I went to Harvard for grad. school though . I loved my college, but I have no need to claim it has a better reputation than MIT or something. I didn't go to the most coveted undergrad school and that's ok, I don't need to twist facts to feel better or something (I truly don't understand why GWU boosters here are twisting facts...).
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| And when was the.last time someone hired you for a job and where you went to school was the deciding factor? I have been out of college for 25 years. I am in a competitive field where my actual degree is not even relevant but my experience is. Nobody cared where you went. They care whether you can perform. If you can't close the $ 250 real in.my business go home? |
| What are the twisted facts? |
| NP here, with no connection to GW. Why can't you people ever see any middle ground. There's a huge space between Harvard and shitty. Like many other schools, GW has some good profs and bad profs, rich kids and intellectual kids. |
I am not sure whom are you responding to, I am the CMU PP and I agree that where one went to college is not very important, certainly not once you move from entry level jobs (there still exists a correlation though because of what kind of people colleges select); heck, I am in academia and even there its importance is limited. Which is why I don't understand why GWU boosters here are so invested into their degrees, they should have gotten over it by now. |
| Umm, I cannot understand why OP's daughter would be simultaneously considering ED to JHU & GW. They are in totally different leagues. If you would have said Georgetown & JHU that would have made more sense. |