That is probably fairly typical of big public universities. |
You are hoping to make something true just through assertion, and elevate U of Florida in the process. Even on your own criteria, seemingly set at 30 and referencing only US News to exclude anything below U of Florida, you have for some reason excluded from consideration UCLA, UC Berkeley, UNC, and UC Santa Barbara. What separates U of Michigan, U of Florida, and U of Virginia from those schools based on your criteria. If you are basing this significantly on NCAA sports, UCLA has 119 championships, UNC has 46, Michigan 39, Berkeley 38, Florida 37, and UVA 29 (maybe now 30). So not sure why UCLA, UNC, and Berkeley would be excluded. For students/alumni that "actually love attending the school" what evidence are you looking at? Not a single one of these shows up in the top 20 in Princeton Review for "students love these colleges" and only UC Santa Barbara shows up in Princeton Review's "happiest students" listing. However, there are other public schools on those lists that would seem worthy of consideration. For undergraduate academic quality or graduate program quality, not sure why Berkeley, UCLA, and UNC would be excluded, and you could certainly make a case for a number of schools beyond the ones listed above. |
I have a kid at Michigan and went to a different Big 10 school decades ago. Neither of us had quizzes or worksheets. My kid has had papers and exams, a very similar workload to what I had. |
Online quizzes and worksheets is unsurprising considering you know, its been all online. As for papers, that depends on the classes he's taking. Large publics tend to have a large variance in the difficulty of classes. |
Read through the quote thread again and determine who stated that student experience is the most important metric.
Huh, looks like its the person being responded to. The list is not cherry-picked, its literally ranked from 1 to 10. Half the list are "rigorous" as you define it. Well the other half certainly isn't, and in fact includes well known party schools. An they form the majority of the top half of the list. Kansas State, Tulane, Wisconsin, Clemson, Virginia Tech, Auburn, Lehigh, Elon, Vermont, Richmond. Even the single Ivy in the list is the one known for being the most relaxed and laid back academically. Meanwhile schools that everyone considerings rigorous - MIT, Caltech, Columbia, Cornell, Swarthmore, Berkeley, Penn - are no where to be found. |
I have a kid at West Virginia and has not had quizzes or worksheets. All papers and exams. Two classes are 95% of grade is three tests (other 5 is participate which includes some homework assignments/group projects). |
It depends on the major not the school. Liberal arts… papers/exams/projects Science… quizzes/tests/worksheets |
Selecting a school should not be based upon the “energy” (???) of the students on a given day. It’s about learning to write long osiers, to think critically and to get into grad school. I don’t know anyone who went to Univ of Florida and then into an extremely competitive grad school. |
Tulane, Wisconsin and Richmond are all rigorous. Are you just making things up and stating it as fact? |
You are right, I misread it. I'd still say over half are relatively rigorous, so it isn't just a list of party schools. |
I agree. Michigan is in a category of its own. It is the “all around best” university in this country. 😁 |
| I would argue that schools like Michigan, UCLA, Cal, Wisconsin Northwestern, Stanford, UT Austin, UVA and Vanderbilt provide the best of "big school/sports" and academics. |
If those are your criteria, how about Duke, UNC, USC etc.? Not sure what big time programs exist at Northwestern and Vanderbilt. Europeans, by the way, are shocked to find out that U.S. universities have minor league sports programs attached to them. |
Except for the weather category. UF beats them all hands down for that. (UF grad) |
| Unless the student attends on a athletic scholarship, why care about the Division IA sports teams (unless you are a vile child molester, then Penn State football.) |