Anonymous wrote:I don't get this phenomenon - maybe someone can outline the history, but to me it's just another state school? I can't think of a single department at Michigan that performs *significantly* better with career/grad school outcomes than UMCP for example.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It has to do with the fact that there used to be quotas on Jews at the elite east coast schools and so the smart Jews who were shut out of them went to schools like Michigan (Wisconsin a big one too). And it just became a ripple effect.
I never knew this. Do a lot of Jews go to school in the midwest?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It has to do with the fact that there used to be quotas on Jews at the elite east coast schools and so the smart Jews who were shut out of them went to schools like Michigan (Wisconsin a big one too). And it just became a ripple effect.
I never knew this. Do a lot of Jews go to school in the midwest?
Certain schools, yes. University of Michigan, University of Wisconsin-Madison, Indiana University, and Michigan State rank #5, #6, #9, and #14 for highest number of Jews among colleges and universities in North America. University of Illinois and Ohio State come in at 19 and 22.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It has to do with the fact that there used to be quotas on Jews at the elite east coast schools and so the smart Jews who were shut out of them went to schools like Michigan (Wisconsin a big one too). And it just became a ripple effect.
I never knew this. Do a lot of Jews go to school in the midwest?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It has to do with the fact that there used to be quotas on Jews at the elite east coast schools and so the smart Jews who were shut out of them went to schools like Michigan (Wisconsin a big one too). And it just became a ripple effect.
I never knew this. Do a lot of Jews go to school in the midwest?
Anonymous wrote:It has to do with the fact that there used to be quotas on Jews at the elite east coast schools and so the smart Jews who were shut out of them went to schools like Michigan (Wisconsin a big one too). And it just became a ripple effect.
Anonymous wrote:Schools with good football get to be known. Notre Dame for example People know ND because they had an agreement with a TV station to play all their games starting in 1950. People grew to love ND and hence people wanted their kids to go there.
Michigan football is very popular. It makes it a popular school.
Michigan has a terrible budget issue a few years back and they were letting in more full pay students from out of state to right the boat. Most those kids were full pay rich kids with okayish grades. That is why it is so popular with kids from W schools.