It’s basically an entirely different rating which penalizes all private schools outside of the T10. Personally, I care more about class sizes, resources spent per student and graduation rates, all things U S News has chosen to devalue. |
Scores are meaningless. Pretty much every kid I know did not send scores to UMich. and got in based on inflated GPA alone. |
Yes, a guy made up the term in the ‘80s to sell a book, and some other guys jumped on the bandwagon because they too saw the potential to make money from gullible strivers, the sort of people who use this term on the internet today. |
I only pointed it out for the rabid UVA booster posting misinformation. |
| Hey annoying UVA boosters, stop hijacking threads and go make your own threads. |
Overall, there is a bigger gap in gpa/test scores between in state and out of state students in Michigan than Virginia. You can look it up if you like. |
UCLA and Cal charge roughly $20K less per year than most of the top 25 privates. My DD is at UCLA and her tuition is lower than the DC private school that she graduated from! |
Not nearly by as much. Just a spot or two, and only because the two public UC schools went up. |
| People only went to Washu because it was T15. Apps are going to crater this year and next. |
The UVA keyboard warriors... |
??? Rice is worse than UVA because it’s small and undergrad-focused? Duke is worse than UVA because they don’t have Coach K anymore? You need to leave the DMV and find what people really think out there my friend. |
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None of this is based on hard academic merit. It's social factors and diversity and first gen and holistic measures.
Only a school that requires all test scores (not test optional), gpa, course rigor and known for quality education should be in the top 10. It's no longer a purely 'academic' list. |
Most people cannot afford the expensive privates. So, they go to the good flagships and are able to do well and get good paying jobs. The elite expensive colleges only let in a small percentage of lower/middle class students, and while they can and do become upwardly social mobile after graduating, the percentage is much smaller compared to those who go to the public flagships. Those expensive privates claim that they need to keep legacy so that they can provide more financial aid to lower income students. So, the list is a function of those expensive colleges and their legacy practices. |
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"But more than a dozen public universities, many of them with relatively low profiles, climbed at least 50 spots in the rankings. Fresno State moved up 64 places, to No. 185, for instance, and Florida Atlantic ascended 53, to No. 209. Many other public institutions recorded smaller, if notable, gains, like Rutgers, which saw each of its three campuses rise by at least 15 places.
They benefited from an algorithm that sent some private universities’ rankings plummeting but represented an effort to account for deals that higher education leaders routinely talk up, like transforming the lives of economically disadvantaged students... The reworked formula assigned greater emphasis to graduation rates for students who received need-based Pell grants and retention. It also introduced metrics tied to first-generation college students and to whether recent graduates were earning more than people who had completed only high school... The company discarded five factors that often favored wealthy colleges and together made up 18 percent of a school’s score, including undergraduate class sizes, alumni giving rates and high school class standing... Private universities proved particularly vulnerable to the new formula. Small class size, which was 8 percent of a score a year ago, is a matter of pride for many elite institutions. Its disappearance from the algorithm played a role in some top schools’ rankings tumbling. The University of Chicago, No. 6 last year, moved down to No. 12. Dartmouth declined six places to finish at No. 18. Washington University in St. Louis, which was No. 15 last year, slipped to 24th. Brandeis, now ranked 60th, fell 16 spots, almost as much as Wake Forest, which declined 18 spots to tie for No. 47. Tulane went to No. 73 from No. 44... U.S. News is accustomed to complaints. The publisher has given no signal, though, that it is interested in abandoning a system that brings in millions of eyeballs — and dollars." |
please, college admissions hasn't been solely about academic merit for a while. I keep hearing that SAT scores and GPAs aren't the only measure of what "merit" means. |