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LinkedIn data is a really large and comparatively easily accessed data set.
Sampling is an incredibly difficult task and quite expensive to do perfectly. Scholarly papers are looking at LinkedIn data and producing valid conclusions. Perhaps they are directional. It is foolish to dismiss LinkedIn as a data set. Especially in favor of a rankings series produced by a second-rate magazine that doesn't exist anymore and is now just a list-selling business. |
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I'd say a major problem with U.S. News is that people define schools by it — for example, "T20s" — without citing a souce or naming a category.
In contrast, with posts using College Transitions the source and methodology are right there for anyone to view, evaluate and criticize when appropriate. What I object to most though is the OP attempting to interfere with information that may benefit some people in constructing college lists or in evaluating potential choices. |
This! |
| I don’t even know what you are talking about and I’ve been on this board since 2023. |
You aren’t very active then |
These categorizations are much like that of Barron's, only more accessible. Certainly the site can be helpful. |
+1 I think the person who constantly cites college transitions rankings has a favored school that is high in their rankings. |
Awwww...info contradicts what you want to believe? Poor thing. |
https://www.collegetransitions.com/dataverse/top-feeders-tech/ |
| A PP. For the record, I'd like to comment that resumes are also self-reported data. |
Yep. OP is nonsense. |
+1. I hope this isn’t the type of reasoning they teach at Harvard law. I wouldn’t fixate on the exact spot each school has in a ranking—because this type of analysis isn’t 100% exact—but there is nothing inherently wrong with combing through tens of thousands of LinkedIn profiles to find where people with certain jobs went to school. PeakFrameworks has a similar analysis for investment banking with slightly different firms and years looked at, and the results aren’t terribly different. It gives you a good general idea and is consistent with what schools are generally accepted as targets. |
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By its nature, DCUM is a repetitive forum. OP's that ask similar questions, such as "What colleges are close in selectivity to those on my current list," are likely to receive similar responses. For this type of question, College Transitions can be good source for offering further ideas, of which some may not have been previously familiar to those who come here for help. As to why the OP of this topic would be reading numerous other topics in order to encounter these examples, and then complaining about them by hinging the complaint on a tenuous LinkedIn connection . . . well, this seems to be some type of personal matter.
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| Agree. College transitions' feeder lists are stupid. |
| The OP's "content" appears to be other people's content. |