Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If you were talking about an Ivy vs. someplace like Towson, I’d say go for the bigger overall name, but this is Wisconsin and Indiana, which are probably more alike than they are different. If he’s leaning towards the business major, I’d go to Indiana. If he’s leaning more econ, I’d choose Wisconsin. If he changes his mind, both schools are strong enough in both areas that it shouldn’t make a difference.
Wisconsin is ranked 11th for economics with a very distinguished history. Indiana is in the 50s.
This is practically true for every program at Wisconsin vs Indiana. Rich people on here don't like that Wisconsin has good departments, while also having a lot of middle class students. So they resort to claiming the schools are the same.
What in the world are you talking about, lol? Do you actually think Indiana doesn’t have middle class students??
Wisconsin is a great school and strong in many areas. Indiana is also a very good school—not as highly ranked overall, but still stronger in some areas than Wisconsin. Both are big Midwestern universities in terrific college towns, with a lot of school spirit. It’s hard to go wrong either way. I would say the much same thing if we were talking about schools like Ohio State or Purdue.
—signed, a former middle class Midwesterner who would be happy to send their kid to any of the above
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If you were talking about an Ivy vs. someplace like Towson, I’d say go for the bigger overall name, but this is Wisconsin and Indiana, which are probably more alike than they are different. If he’s leaning towards the business major, I’d go to Indiana. If he’s leaning more econ, I’d choose Wisconsin. If he changes his mind, both schools are strong enough in both areas that it shouldn’t make a difference.
Wisconsin is ranked 11th for economics with a very distinguished history. Indiana is in the 50s.
This is practically true for every program at Wisconsin vs Indiana. Rich people on here don't like that Wisconsin has good departments, while also having a lot of middle class students. So they resort to claiming the schools are the same.
Anonymous wrote:The majority of students change their major at least once. I would choose the school that is the best fit overall (prestige may be a part of best fit, but it isn't everything).
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If you were talking about an Ivy vs. someplace like Towson, I’d say go for the bigger overall name, but this is Wisconsin and Indiana, which are probably more alike than they are different. If he’s leaning towards the business major, I’d go to Indiana. If he’s leaning more econ, I’d choose Wisconsin. If he changes his mind, both schools are strong enough in both areas that it shouldn’t make a difference.
Wisconsin is ranked 11th for economics with a very distinguished history. Indiana is in the 50s.
Anonymous wrote:If you were talking about an Ivy vs. someplace like Towson, I’d say go for the bigger overall name, but this is Wisconsin and Indiana, which are probably more alike than they are different. If he’s leaning towards the business major, I’d go to Indiana. If he’s leaning more econ, I’d choose Wisconsin. If he changes his mind, both schools are strong enough in both areas that it shouldn’t make a difference.
Anonymous wrote:In my opinion, go for overall university. Most colleges teach content that is very very different from the skills required for real world jobs.
For example, even in a highly practical major like computer science, only a few courses tend to be directly relevant to what a real software engineer does in their day to day. Trust me I was a CS major at a top engineering school and now work in tech.
To a large extent, even more than the education itself, the value a college provides is twofold: (1) branding/stamp of approval, and (2) professional network. In an ideal world also (3) a positive experience for 4 years and pleasant memories shared with friends.
I doubt a CS major at Harvard is learning more useful engineering skills than a CS major at a decent state university (if you believe reports surrounding rampant grade inflation, its possible they're learning less haha).
However, and this is a big however, the Harvard name will open doors everywhere in a way that most other college names can't. Also, the CS major from Harvard will have spent 4 years networking with other ambitious overachievers who will likely be in a position to help them professionally later in life.
I'm giving an extreme example to demonstrate the point but I think the argument still stands. Unless they want to pursue a PhD after undergrad, my opinion is that the overall brand and network are probably more important simply because academia tends to focus on content very divorced from real world careers.