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College and University Discussion
Reply to "Which universities have gone DOWN in stature over the years? "
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[quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous]^Also, a lot of people blame W&M's decreasing stature on it's reputation as an all work-no play school for grinds. That was an actually positive thing, because it attracted the studious kids, made sure the dumb ones avoided the place, and increased the degree's value among employers. Schools like U. Chicago, Hopkins and Swarthmore are known to be far more demanding, filled with grinds and places where fun goes to die. All three of those schools have increased in stature greatly over the past 20 years. Because their reputation brought additional academic prestige, better students, better professors, and better employers to the school. Meanwhile W&M tried to become more like UVA, putting money into Greek Life and sports stadiums. The result was UVA-lite, at a higher cost than UVA, with a lower ranking, worse job prospects,[b] worse professors[/b], fewer resources, etc. etc. Plain mismanagement by the administration. Compare the reputation of the school among the older generations now in their 60s to those in their 20s today. The older generation thinks it's one of the best schools in the country for undergraduate rigor. The younger generation thinks it's an oversized middling liberal arts college similar to so many other oversized middling liberal arts colleges in the country today. [/quote] Most of your post is just a DCUM hack job with no facts, but I'll just pick one of your points, that W&M has "worse professors". If you are looking at quality of instruction, W&M is ranked much higher in USNWR for undergraduate teaching, and is also higher in all the survey based questions on professors in Princeton Review and Niche (Are professors prepared, available, understandable, interested in student success, etc.) [/quote]
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