| Uh, I'm sorry to say, but the people who love to harp the most about Tufts' ranking is students, alumni, and parents. Tufts is notoriously insecure, hence Tufts Syndrome. |
Oh, let me guess…you are an alum, which is why you are so sure of your statement? Ha…Please! I am not even affiliated with Tufts, but just look back on this thread. There is no evidence the Tufts detractors even have a Tufts relationship. I call BS on your implausible assertion. |
| I read this long thread. My kid did not even apply for Cornell and Dartmouth, because some kids do not like cold and nowhere environment. Also, as parents, we prefer my kid applying for schools only at north eastern area including NY, NJ, MA and PA. One more condition, my kid does not like smaller LAC colleges but okay for UP, Yale, Columbia, Brown, Tufts and applied for NYU, BU as backup. We have net family asset over $6M through over 25 years of hard working and smart investment so we do not have problem to pay higher tuition as first generation of highly educated immigrants. |
+1 I have heard this often. |
+1 There are a handful of schools that certain DCUMers target. It is more than obvious that those posters have never been to the schools they try to "discuss" - if you read their posts, they sound similar, have similar voice, and attack nonsensical and/or untrue things about the school/s. Their posts are basically rubbish. |
| Tufts - tough to get into these days because of high inflation with flow of printed money? LOL |
+1 The troll college posts are the most obvious, because the trolls obviously resort to Googled information, which is easily decimated by people who actually have first hand familiarity with the school. |
| Wow, this thread sucks. So much elitism. All the schools you guys are name-dropping here are awesome. Emory, Tufts, Rochester, and anything else. They're all amazing places with many opportunities for those that want them. A school doesn't define a person's future, intelligence, or personality. It's such a blanket statement to say that Tufts students have "A brains and B personalities." You have no idea what any of these people are like or their circumstances. Stop labeling people like this, it's so toxic. Maybe instead of worrying about the name brand of the college you attended, worry about your personal goals in life. That's much more important. |
x1000000 As if there are any, for OP. |
I have no connection to Tufts, but I’m really tired of bullies like you who come here to trash colleges and people who happen to like those colleges. You are awful people. Your existence makes the world worse. |
| Weirdest post. Tufts is a top notch school in a great location. It’s the first choice of many at my kid’s school and many apply early. It’s 2023 not 1993. Signed an HYP grad |
+1 OP has a handful of schools, applying the same rhetoric. |
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100% honest & Troll-free
I just finished reading this entire unbelievable thread. I’m recuperating from cancer surgery, which, other than incarceration, is the only sane excuse for spending half a day reading this. I went to a public high school in a seedy Boston suburb, then to undergrad in the area. I was Ben Affleck in Good Will Hunting before he was (the drinking age was 18, and yes, we would occasionally slither into Harvard bars for sport). This might take a couple posts, but I’ve got plenty of time (I hope!). 1. Colleges are incredibly multifaceted—moreso than corporations, airports, maybe even some small countries. To glibly say one is “better” than another is a grotesque simplification. For example, Boise State is a far “better” place to go than Princeton if you want to study accounting as an undergrad. 2.Just because somebody gathers a ton of data and numerically ranks entities by their chosen criteria, it doesn’t follow that there are significant differences between #4 on in the ranking and #87. I think you could make a case for, say, it being possible to get a roughly equivalent education at us news colleges 20-70. Certainly the hair splitting over Tufts’ peers is an outrageously optimistic view of the numerical ranking’s use in deciding qualitative relationships…Especially if u know how hard it is to get tenure-track positions these days. It’s tv probably unlikely that there is something the faculty at Tufts knows that the profs at UC-Irvine or University of Louisville don’t know (ESPECIALLY as it applies at the undergraduate level). 3. The Tufts name… I never, ever heard anyone pronounce the second “t” in Tufts. When I first mentioned that there was a college named Tufts to my foreign-born wife, she thought I was kidding. 4. Never underestimate the gravitational pull of the Boston/Cambridge area on college-age kids. I think many here are over-analyzing the flaws & merits of Tufts. I bet a lot of those who ED there aren’t comparing it to Northwestern, Cornell, and Georgetown using spreadsheets full of data. Kids that age aren’t usually driven by stark rationality. A military recruiter once told me the trick to selling young people on something is to find that one thing that gets their juices flowing. No matter how complicated we think the college-selection process is, I bet in the minds of a bunch of those who ED to Tufts, the selection process is “Good college near Boston? Cool!” They couldn’t care less what departments are ranked (especially nutrition & conflict resolution!!!); they are more excited about being able to party with classmates they know who will be going to BU, Brandeis, & Northeastern. |