The Ivy lovefest is getting out of control ![]() |
That was 80 years ago. |
Oh c'mon. That is an extremely dated view. Compared to many other schools, Harvard does not have meaningful engineering or computer science programs. Sure, they have math and the natural sciences. But in the majors that are in exceptionally high demand, they don't compare to MIT, Stanford, Berkeley, Michigan, Purdue, CalTech, Cornell, CMU, Rice, UCLA, Georgia Tech, Texas, UIUC and others. Harvard - and Yale - are not elite schools in the fields that matter. Mediocre. |
All these rankings are meaningless. Everyone knows there about 10 schools that open doors - Harvard, Princeton, Stanford, Yale, MIT, Dartmouth, Penn, Cornell, Brown maybe a couple of others. |
Only HYPMS open doors and even there if you major in something useful. Cornell is not opening any doors, unless it is engineering. Wharton may open doors but not Penn in general. |
With an acceptance rate of 5.2%, Princeton doesn't care what your kid thought |
*This* |
Swap Cornell and brown with duke and caltech and yes |
Caltech I'd agree with adding generally. Duke, not so much unless you are a member of the Brotherhood. I've worked for a few very selective employers, and Stanford and Harvard are the two that really seem to open doors over the last decade. MIT and Caltech as well for technical roles and Penn and Yale in finance and marketing. Otherwise, the names are nice but not really distinguished from another 10 schools. Princeton is the one that I've been a little surprised by not doing quite as well (I would have expected more of the Harvard/Stanford response), though their alums are tight and I've noticed hire one another directly more than other similar schools (I wonder if this is what makes others a little suspect generally to be honest). Columbia also tends to do better than Cornell, Brown, and Dartmouth, though that could be due to the industry and Dartmouth is small too. Dartmouth and Swarthmore are the two smaller schools I've been most impressed with. Beyond a few huge name schools though, I observed that it is more industry and type of role specific. |
Not Duke Just HYPSM, Caltech Wharton |
Rankings change, but the schools are all just as great as they always have been. |
I’d somewhat agree, but still say with HPSM/Caltech/Duke/Wharton/Columbia/Yale/Dartmouth lots of doors are still opened. Look at where the top finance and consulting firms recruit most heavily from, it’s those schools by a landslide. |
Threads has gone on for 86 pages but apart from the obvious nod to Stanford and the tech nerds (who should be off getting a patent, not posting on DCUM) constantly trying to boost Caltech and MIT, it's just one long variation of Gossip Girl: "Everyone knows that the only real Ivies are the Holy Trinity: Harvard, Yale, and Princeton." |
Princeton booster again |
Yale has a professor, Zareena Grewal, who is a filthy, pathetic defender of Hamas terrorism, so I'd say Yale is losing out when it comes to anything approaching decency these days. Small wonder it has fallen behind schools that were once its peers. |