Ick. A good reason not to choose Tufts. I thought their vibe was all SJW. Why care about Boston area rankings? |
Washington Monthly and Degree Choices |
Who says they care? There are tons of good schools in the Northeast, Tufts kids are surely aware of that. |
Tufts kids care, that's the point. Ever heard of "Tufts Syndrome?" |
| Too undergrad focused. JHU is way too low, for example. JHU gets the most govt funding out of any school in the country and has more Nobel prize winners than a lot of schools ranked higher. A university is more than just about undergrads. Hopkins has 29 Nobel prize winners while Duke only has 2, for example. |
This is meant for undergrads, all of these rankings are specifically made with that purpose. |
For what it's worth, Duke definitely has more than 2 Nobel prize winners, not sure where you get that number. |
It was a typo - meant 12 as far as I know. JHU still has 2x that. |
Nobel prize counting is not exactly straightforward: most schools count winners as affiliates, meaning people who spent time previously at the institution doing research, teaching, or even doing postgraduate studies all count. If you look purely at alumni winners, the numbers get much smaller. Also, Nobel prizes are primarily a reflection of graduate studies, not undergraduate studies. Hence Berkeley having over 110 "Nobel prize winners" which is actually inflated compared to alumni who've actually gone to win. |
I imagine most of those Nobel prizes are from JHU medical school. Hardly has an effect on college which is what we're discussing. |
Many JHU undergrads do research a JHU medical school. It's also why JHU undergrads have huge success applying to med school - because the school has so much research opportunities available with so much federal money coming in for research. Besides, nearly all of the rankings are based on prestige. Prestige comes from graduate programs and research, not undergrad programs. Where are all of the universities on this list who only offer bachelors or masters? No where to be found, because obviously PhDs matter the most for these rankings, which means actual research, publications, and patents. |
| Please stop |
+1 JHU undergrads have huge success in applying to medical schools which is definitely boosted by their strong medical school. If you look at the top feeders to the best medical schools, JHU is 4th only behind Yale, Duke, and Stanford - it’s even ahead of Harvard. |
There are several rankings that include undergrad only schools like LACs. Forbes, Niche, and Money come to mind. I bolded the LACs in the top 25. In particular Williams seems to do pretty well even against ivies, Stanford, Duke, and MIT. Forbes: 1. MIT 2. Stanford 2. Berkeley 4. Princeton 5. Columbia 6. UCLA 7. Williams 8. Yale 9. Duke 10. Penn 11. Northwestern 12. Rice 13. Vanderbilt 14. Dartmouth 15. Harvard 16. Cornell 17. UCSD 18. Johns Hopkins 19. Brown 20. UChicago 21. USC 22. Georgetown 23. UCSD 24. Amherst 25. UMich Niche 1. MIT 2. Stanford 3. Harvard 4. Yale 5. Princeton 6. Rice 7. Caltech 8. Duke 9. Brown 10. Dartmouth 11. Penn 12. Columbia 13. Vanderbilt 14. Northwestern 15. WashU 16. UChicago 17. Georgetown 18. Harvey Mudd 19. Notre Dame 20. Pomona 21. Johns Hopkins 22. Carnegie Mellon 23. Cornell 24. UCLA 25. UMich Money 1. MIT 2. Princeton 3. Stanford 4. Yale 5. Williams 6. UMich 7. Harvard 8. UNC 9. UVA 10. Duke 11. Penn 12. UCLA 13. Georgetown 14. Northwestern 15. Notre Dame 16. Georgia Tech 17. UIUC 18. Pomona 19. Berkeley 20. Dartmouth 21. Cornell 22. UF 23. UCI 24. UCD 25. Rice |
| Quick question if somebody had a choice of Pomona or Cornell which is more prestigious? Being an East Coast Snob, I would say Cornell. And Ivy is Ivy. That being said for those that know Pomona, know how hard it is to get into. Friend mine said there is always 1 or 2 kids at Harvard Law from Pomona every year. But then again probably at least 10 from Cornell. Hypothetical. |