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College and University Discussion
Reply to "williams vs vassar?"
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[quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous]I don’t think the actual education quality is very different, but Williams is more famous, has a higher rank, and enjoys a larger endowment. [/quote] Is Williams more famous? Vassar is pretty well known...Lisa Simpson was thinking of going there.[/quote] In the real world, maybe 10 percent of Americans are familiar with Williams. And maybe 12 percent with Vassar. [/quote] No Dog in this fight - neither of my kids have interest in these schools; I've heard countless references in Film and TV about Vassar. First heard about it on Beverly Hillbillies and recently on Silicon Valley. I think the Entertainment industry has a lot of alumni from Vassar - the other comments bolster this position with descriptions like "artsy". Williams is not referenced at all in Entertainment but those who about colleges know about Williams. I'm leaning towards Vassar as being more popular but not necessarily "better". And if you have these choices then "life is good!" [/quote] Well if you ever need a job from someone who watches Beverly Hillbillies reruns, you know which school to go to.[/quote] Ok. my point was which school is more known. Like UC Berkeley vs UCLA. UCLA is more popular outside of the US. [/quote] Off topic, but I don’t think that’s true. UCLA might be as or more popular in the US because of sports. But those are mostly US sports that aren’t nearly as popular overseas. Berkeley always tops it in international rankings and has a far more pervasive influence in the history of science worldwide. I say this as one of the people who gets annoyed when boosters talk about his it’s the best school of all time for undergrads— it is not. But everyone who takes intro chem anywhere sees its impact in filling out the periodic table. Everyone interested in CS (which seems like 1/4 of all people studying stem these days) knows something about Berkeley’s role in co-feeding (with Stanford) Silicon Valley’s tech innovation. Most who studied physics have heard something about its history with the Manhattan project. And the world at large is aware of its extensive track record with Nobel-prize winning research, something like 5 times as many affiliations as UCLA. It’s not really close in terms of historic contributions to what we know about nature or to tech innovation. [/quote]
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