Cornell is both an Ivy and a public Ivy!
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SUNY Ithaca FTW! |
| The notion that the “Ivy League” must be referenced only as a sports league or the idea that “Public Ivy” is meaningless because it’s an author’s construct is nonsense. People are always working to group and name things. It’s part of the process of thinking and communicating! You may not like the names or the contents of those references, but if enough people use them to mean the same thing, they are a useful cultural references. |
And in beautiful Ithaca as a bonus. We have a winner. |
| This is silly. No one thinks Stanford sucks because it’s not an Ivy. Everyone knows what you mean when you say a public Ivy. |
True re Stanford, but no one would agree on what a “public Ivy” is, random book from the 80s that tried to make the phrase mainstream or no. If you said that your kid attends an excellent State flagship, on the other hand, most people would be able to name which of the 10 or so public universities that might mean (and that number would definitely include UT Austin and UNC, but not Miami of Ohio). |
| Is there a poison ivy ?? |
Penn |
More like Dartmouth with all the booze and drugs. |
I would no longer include Miami in that list. -- Miami grad 1993. It's a fine school. Used to be considered the best in Ohio. And it's a great undergraduate school. But I don't know that its kept pace with the rigor as the others on the original list. |
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"Public Ivy" is actually "No Ivy."
So, this thread is basically No Ivy vs. Ivy. |
Still, both are public Ivies so same tier. |
Public Ivy is Cornell for one. |
OP's point is Ivy League only references sports and has nothing to do with the academic institutions. I'm guessing it's the same deranged poster who inserts that comment into every post that mentions the Ivy League as short hand for the high caliber academic institutions that are a part of the League. I guess it makes her/him feel good in some way. |
You're wasting your common sense on OP. |