Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:"Tufts is twice as difficult to get into......good luck with that."
Having a 14% acceptance rate compared to a 28% acceptance rate is NOT the same as being twice as difficult to get into.
For example, many students will not even think about schools that take 5 years so NE's potential student pool is smaller.
I suspect the gaming will continue and NE will pass BU, BC and Tufts in the rankings, not that BU, BC and Tufts are just going to roll over.
That says nothing about the fact that all 4 schools are over priced compared to RIT and U of Cinc.
Why isn't price more important on US New list?
Lol....that's pretty much the textbook definition of being twice as hard to get into.
Anonymous wrote:"Tufts is twice as difficult to get into......good luck with that."
Having a 14% acceptance rate compared to a 28% acceptance rate is NOT the same as being twice as difficult to get into.
For example, many students will not even think about schools that take 5 years so NE's potential student pool is smaller.
I suspect the gaming will continue and NE will pass BU, BC and Tufts in the rankings, not that BU, BC and Tufts are just going to roll over.
That says nothing about the fact that all 4 schools are over priced compared to RIT and U of Cinc.
Why isn't price more important on US New list?
Anonymous wrote:Yeah, nothing wrong with Freeman.
To me the point is that STUDENTS should be trying to do the same type of rank climbing for themselves.
The best way to do that is to have a long term plan. Paying NE $68.5k leaves out too much of the future.
You don't want to put all 274k of your eggs in the same basket. If you like the co-op idea:
No matter how prestigious NE becomes, going to RIT and then having $63.2k left to get a one year Masters leaves you ahead of the game.
Going to U of Cinc, lets you not only get a one year masters but leaves you with $29k to subsidize your first couple of years salary so that you can take a lower paying job that has more upward mobility.
If you really like the idea of putting your entire $68.5k on one school, go to Tufts, BC or BU all still ranked above NE and it's not exactly impossible to get internships in the summer from those schools.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Yeah, nothing wrong with Freeman.
To me the point is that STUDENTS should be trying to do the same type of rank climbing for themselves.
The best way to do that is to have a long term plan. Paying NE $68.5k leaves out too much of the future.
You don't want to put all 274k of your eggs in the same basket. If you like the co-op idea:
No matter how prestigious NE becomes, going to RIT and then having $63.2k left to get a one year Masters leaves you ahead of the game.
Going to U of Cinc, lets you not only get a one year masters but leaves you with $29k to subsidize your first couple of years salary so that you can take a lower paying job that has more upward mobility.
If you really like the idea of putting your entire $68.5k on one school, go to Tufts, BC or BU all still ranked above NE and it's not exactly impossible to get internships in the summer from those schools.
Tufts is twice as difficult to get into......good luck with that.
Mean SAT
Tufts- 1423
NE- 1420
More than twice as hard?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Yeah, nothing wrong with Freeman.
To me the point is that STUDENTS should be trying to do the same type of rank climbing for themselves.
The best way to do that is to have a long term plan. Paying NE $68.5k leaves out too much of the future.
You don't want to put all 274k of your eggs in the same basket. If you like the co-op idea:
No matter how prestigious NE becomes, going to RIT and then having $63.2k left to get a one year Masters leaves you ahead of the game.
Going to U of Cinc, lets you not only get a one year masters but leaves you with $29k to subsidize your first couple of years salary so that you can take a lower paying job that has more upward mobility.
If you really like the idea of putting your entire $68.5k on one school, go to Tufts, BC or BU all still ranked above NE and it's not exactly impossible to get internships in the summer from those schools.
Tufts is twice as difficult to get into......good luck with that.
Anonymous wrote:Yeah, nothing wrong with Freeman.
To me the point is that STUDENTS should be trying to do the same type of rank climbing for themselves.
The best way to do that is to have a long term plan. Paying NE $68.5k leaves out too much of the future.
You don't want to put all 274k of your eggs in the same basket. If you like the co-op idea:
No matter how prestigious NE becomes, going to RIT and then having $63.2k left to get a one year Masters leaves you ahead of the game.
Going to U of Cinc, lets you not only get a one year masters but leaves you with $29k to subsidize your first couple of years salary so that you can take a lower paying job that has more upward mobility.
If you really like the idea of putting your entire $68.5k on one school, go to Tufts, BC or BU all still ranked above NE and it's not exactly impossible to get internships in the summer from those schools.