Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Princeton undergrad, Harvard grad
hi ted. stop being a bigot
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
Exactly. Anyone would be privileged to go to any of them. The nowhere sbillet jelly state u alums are desperate to prove themselves.. I know, I know, you went to UMd.. And your program was better than Harvard.
Quote=Anonymous]All three are terrific schools. If you are really bright, have a sense of purpose and go after what you want in life, they can equally give you what you need. If you are, however, the type that allows the impressions of others (ill-informed reputation, antiquated facts, prejudices) to dominate your view of things, then they are equally useless. They are far more similar than they are different.
I graduated with honors from Phillips Academy, Andover, applied early to Georgetown School of Foreign Service and UChicago, got into both, and chose Georgetown. I didn't apply anywhere else because those were my top choice schools. I graduated with a 3.85 GPA and then graduated with honors from UChicago with a graduate degree in political science. I'm now at my dream job.
Anonymous wrote:DC got into H, turned it down for Stanford. The H bomb isn't the end-all for many people.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:1. this is a ridiculous thread, in large part because getting into these schools has become essentially a lottery, and there are far more than 3 excellent schools in this country, so boiling it down constantly to these 3 is ridiculous and narrow-minded.
2. princeton is exclusionary and elitist to the point of being almost offensive. harvard's undergrad education is not worth it (too much grade inflation, too many classes taught by TAs). if i had to chose, i'd chose yale (despite the fact that new haven sucks). however, i chose to not apply to any of those colleges (applied to georgetown sfs and uchicago early, got into both and chose georgetown sfs).
You accurately describe Princeton a century ago - today not at all. How big of you to not even apply to any of these schools and yet to profess so much knowledge about them.
And how much do you know about Princeton? I have dozens of friends who went to those schools (my high school is essentially a feeder school to Ivy league and other top schools). It was very clear to all of us that Princeton expends the least effort of basically any other school in America to try to truly become an inclusive institution.
Well, I went there and am still actively involved. For example, I attended an event with the university President a few months ago where 80% of the talk was about financial and other efforts to creat socioeconomic diversity. I think one could even argue that this laudable goal is becoming too much of a focus, but maybe they rightly feel that they have to go above and beyond because of people like you who have very outdated views of Princeton.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The schools boast diversity but that is a flat out lie. Jewish students are over represented at 27% of the student body. Non Jewish white students are the most underpresented group compared with the overall population.
Princeton:
Ethnicity of Students from U.S. 0.1% American Indian/Alaskan Native
24.3% Asian
8.6% Black/African-American
10.5% Hispanic/Latino
4.3% Multi-race (not Hispanic/Latino)
0.2% Native Hawaiian/ Pacific Islander
50.3% White. -> approx. 10% Jewish not all a Jews are white
1.7% Unknown
14% legacy
International Students 11.1% from 93 countries
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
Exactly. Anyone would be privileged to go to any of them. The nowhere sbillet jelly state u alums are desperate to prove themselves.. I know, I know, you went to UMd.. And your program was better than Harvard.
Quote=Anonymous]All three are terrific schools. If you are really bright, have a sense of purpose and go after what you want in life, they can equally give you what you need. If you are, however, the type that allows the impressions of others (ill-informed reputation, antiquated facts, prejudices) to dominate your view of things, then they are equally useless. They are far more similar than they are different.
I graduated with honors from Phillips Academy, Andover, applied early to Georgetown School of Foreign Service and UChicago, got into both, and chose Georgetown. I didn't apply anywhere else because those were my top choice schools. I graduated with a 3.85 GPA and then graduated with honors from UChicago with a graduate degree in political science. I'm now at my dream job.
Anonymous wrote:The schools boast diversity but that is a flat out lie. Jewish students are over represented at 27% of the student body. Non Jewish white students are the most underpresented group compared with the overall population.
Anonymous wrote:
Exactly. Anyone would be privileged to go to any of them. The nowhere sbillet jelly state u alums are desperate to prove themselves.. I know, I know, you went to UMd.. And your program was better than Harvard.
Quote=Anonymous]All three are terrific schools. If you are really bright, have a sense of purpose and go after what you want in life, they can equally give you what you need. If you are, however, the type that allows the impressions of others (ill-informed reputation, antiquated facts, prejudices) to dominate your view of things, then they are equally useless. They are far more similar than they are different.
I graduated with honors from Phillips Academy, Andover, applied early to Georgetown School of Foreign Service and UChicago, got into both, and chose Georgetown. I didn't apply anywhere else because those were my top choice schools. I graduated with a 3.85 GPA and then graduated with honors from UChicago with a graduate degree in political science. I'm now at my dream job.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:1. this is a ridiculous thread, in large part because getting into these schools has become essentially a lottery, and there are far more than 3 excellent schools in this country, so boiling it down constantly to these 3 is ridiculous and narrow-minded.
2. princeton is exclusionary and elitist to the point of being almost offensive. harvard's undergrad education is not worth it (too much grade inflation, too many classes taught by TAs). if i had to chose, i'd chose yale (despite the fact that new haven sucks). however, i chose to not apply to any of those colleges (applied to georgetown sfs and uchicago early, got into both and chose georgetown sfs).
You accurately describe Princeton a century ago - today not at all. How big of you to not even apply to any of these schools and yet to profess so much knowledge about them.
And how much do you know about Princeton? I have dozens of friends who went to those schools (my high school is essentially a feeder school to Ivy league and other top schools). It was very clear to all of us that Princeton expends the least effort of basically any other school in America to try to truly become an inclusive institution.
Well, I went there and am still actively involved. For example, I attended an event with the university President a few months ago where 80% of the talk was about financial and other efforts to creat socioeconomic diversity. I think one could even argue that this laudable goal is becoming too much of a focus, but maybe they rightly feel that they have to go above and beyond because of people like you who have very outdated views of Princeton.