Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
I am quite sure that New Haven is much more dangerous than anywhere in New Zealand.
I was a professor at Yale and New Zealand. I was robbed at gunpoint in front of my Yale office. In New Zealand, the T.V. show "Cops" had an episode where the worst crime in the capital city Auckland was attempted drunk driving.
Subsequently, I saw the mob of students shrieking at professor Nicholas Christakis. His wife left the university at the end of the year, but there were no sanctions for the students. That confirmed my impression that professors are not safe there.
It’s hard to say which damaged the reputation of Yale more: the mob of shrieking students or the fact that Yale didn’t go out of its way to support Christakis and his wife. Either way it’s no longer a serious university and is coasting on its past glories.
It really is interesting how much that incident hurt Yale's reputation. The students are clearly garbage. And the institutional response was pathetic. I don't particularly care about Yale one way or another, but my impression is that's a lame school.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
I am quite sure that New Haven is much more dangerous than anywhere in New Zealand.
I was a professor at Yale and New Zealand. I was robbed at gunpoint in front of my Yale office. In New Zealand, the T.V. show "Cops" had an episode where the worst crime in the capital city Auckland was attempted drunk driving.
Subsequently, I saw the mob of students shrieking at professor Nicholas Christakis. His wife left the university at the end of the year, but there were no sanctions for the students. That confirmed my impression that professors are not safe there.
It’s hard to say which damaged the reputation of Yale more: the mob of shrieking students or the fact that Yale didn’t go out of its way to support Christakis and his wife. Either way it’s no longer a serious university and is coasting on its past glories.
It really is interesting how much that incident hurt Yale's reputation. The students are clearly garbage. And the institutional response was pathetic. I don't particularly care about Yale one way or another, but my impression is that's a lame school.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
I am quite sure that New Haven is much more dangerous than anywhere in New Zealand.
I was a professor at Yale and New Zealand. I was robbed at gunpoint in front of my Yale office. In New Zealand, the T.V. show "Cops" had an episode where the worst crime in the capital city Auckland was attempted drunk driving.
Subsequently, I saw the mob of students shrieking at professor Nicholas Christakis. His wife left the university at the end of the year, but there were no sanctions for the students. That confirmed my impression that professors are not safe there.
It’s hard to say which damaged the reputation of Yale more: the mob of shrieking students or the fact that Yale didn’t go out of its way to support Christakis and his wife. Either way it’s no longer a serious university and is coasting on its past glories.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
I am quite sure that New Haven is much more dangerous than anywhere in New Zealand.
I was a professor at Yale and New Zealand. I was robbed at gunpoint in front of my Yale office. In New Zealand, the T.V. show "Cops" had an episode where the worst crime in the capital city Auckland was attempted drunk driving.
Subsequently, I saw the mob of students shrieking at professor Nicholas Christakis. His wife left the university at the end of the year, but there were no sanctions for the students. That confirmed my impression that professors are not safe there.
It’s hard to say which damaged the reputation of Yale more: the mob of shrieking students or the fact that Yale didn’t go out of its way to support Christakis and his wife. Either way it’s no longer a serious university and is coasting on its past glories.
It really is interesting how much that incident hurt Yale's reputation. The students are clearly garbage. And the institutional response was pathetic. I don't particularly care about Yale one way or another, but my impression is that's a lame school.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
I am quite sure that New Haven is much more dangerous than anywhere in New Zealand.
I was a professor at Yale and New Zealand. I was robbed at gunpoint in front of my Yale office. In New Zealand, the T.V. show "Cops" had an episode where the worst crime in the capital city Auckland was attempted drunk driving.
Subsequently, I saw the mob of students shrieking at professor Nicholas Christakis. His wife left the university at the end of the year, but there were no sanctions for the students. That confirmed my impression that professors are not safe there.
It’s hard to say which damaged the reputation of Yale more: the mob of shrieking students or the fact that Yale didn’t go out of its way to support Christakis and his wife. Either way it’s no longer a serious university and is coasting on its past glories.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
I am quite sure that New Haven is much more dangerous than anywhere in New Zealand.
I was a professor at Yale and New Zealand. I was robbed at gunpoint in front of my Yale office. In New Zealand, the T.V. show "Cops" had an episode where the worst crime in the capital city Auckland was attempted drunk driving.
Subsequently, I saw the mob of students shrieking at professor Nicholas Christakis. His wife left the university at the end of the year, but there were no sanctions for the students. That confirmed my impression that professors are not safe there.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Yes, Yale sounds like a truly horrific place to me. Please don’t let your kids apply! The acceptance rate is too low already![]()
+1![]()
I wish nonsense like this would turn people away. Yale is my kid’s dream school!
To be honest, crime concerns and lack of STEM strength have turned people and away and pushed Yale to the bottom of HYPSM, and I’ve seen more than a few posters just using HPSM to refer to the best schools (HPSM are equally strong in humanities and STEM and have “the best of both worlds”).
Reality: no one says HPSM except trolls trying to boost lower Ivies.
I didn’t go to any of these schools, but I’m sick of the Yale, Columbia and UChicago bashing. It’s so stupid.
+ 1
Me too, don’t get the Yale hate. We visited when my kid was looking at colleges and we both loved it. I truly felt a sense of community and it felt like a very special place.
Unfortunately, my kid didn’t get in but I wouldn’t bash the place.
It's just jealousy. I haven't heard anything but love from anyone who's toured it lately.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
I am quite sure that New Haven is much more dangerous than anywhere in New Zealand.
I was a professor at Yale and New Zealand. I was robbed at gunpoint in front of my Yale office. In New Zealand, the T.V. show "Cops" had an episode where the worst crime in the capital city Auckland was attempted drunk driving.
Subsequently, I saw the mob of students shrieking at professor Nicholas Christakis. His wife left the university at the end of the year, but there were no sanctions for the students. That confirmed my impression that professors are not safe there.
Anonymous wrote:
I am quite sure that New Haven is much more dangerous than anywhere in New Zealand.
Anonymous wrote:I’m a 2008 alum, and I loved being an undergrad at Yale. It changed the trajectory of my life and enriched it in so many ways. I have the fondest memories of my time there and each time I go back to campus I love being surrounded by the energy and inspiration that permeates the place.
I felt very safe at Yale and the surrounding area even though crime was an issue when I was there. As someone else mentioned, Yale takes safety very seriously and dedicates a lot of resources to it. I actually feel that safety-wise the situation has improved even more since I graduated.
Anonymous wrote:I am extremely skeptical that Yale was "nothing special" in the 1990s. Yale has been ranked 1, 2, or 3 in the country since forever - definitely since 1980.
Anonymous wrote:I got into Yale early action back in the 90s but attended an orientation weekend for admitted students and was completely weirded out. I went elsewhere.