Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Which schools share similar culture?
For e.g. which schools share the same culture as Brown?
For e.g. Duke shares somewhat of a similar culture like NU.
U Chicago with Caltech?
UT with Upitt?
Is UT for University of Texas or U Toronto? Not sure, Pitt, to my knowledge, is kind of unique as an urban state flagship with around 18-19k undergrads. U Toronto seems at least 3 times the size of a Pitt. Maybe they have other similarities or there are other similar schools, it depends what your student likes about Pitt.
Pitt isn't the flagship and it's not unique even in its own state: Temple is the same school, just in Philly.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Is processing speed really something that colleges would need to know about and make decisions based upon?
Of course not.
Anonymous wrote:Is processing speed really something that colleges would need to know about and make decisions based upon?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:For Brown, consider other colleges with an open curriculum - Wesleyan, Vassar, Smith, Grinnell, etc.
Brown has more in common with other ivy pluses such as Yale, Columbia, Harvard, MIT than wesleyan's, Smith, or grinnel. In terms of information processing, there's a big difference between top 1% and top 3%.
No idea if that’s true or not. Top 1% of what? And how do you know that difference is present between Brown and the other schools? I’m extremely skeptical that Brown or any other Ivy makes admissions decisions based on information processing speed. Students don’t submit a battery of psych-ed tests with their applications, and neither SAT nor GPA tests that.
Cognitively there's a difference between 99th percentile and 97 percentile. Even if you have no idea, I think you'll agree Einstein and Newton are on a different level than the run-of-the-mill geniuses.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:For Brown, consider other colleges with an open curriculum - Wesleyan, Vassar, Smith, Grinnell, etc.
Brown has more in common with other ivy pluses such as Yale, Columbia, Harvard, MIT than wesleyan's, Smith, or grinnel. In terms of information processing, there's a big difference between top 1% and top 3%.
No idea if that’s true or not. Top 1% of what? And how do you know that difference is present between Brown and the other schools? I’m extremely skeptical that Brown or any other Ivy makes admissions decisions based on information processing speed. Students don’t submit a battery of psych-ed tests with their applications, and neither SAT nor GPA tests that.
Cognitively there's a difference between 99th percentile and 97 percentile. Even if you have no idea, I think you'll agree Einstein and Newton are on a different level than the run-of-the-mill geniuses.
LMAO. Einstein had a learning disability. He never would have scored 99th %ile on today’s tests.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Which schools share similar culture?
For e.g. which schools share the same culture as Brown?
For e.g. Duke shares somewhat of a similar culture like NU.
U Chicago with Caltech?
UT with Upitt?
Is UT for University of Texas or U Toronto? Not sure, Pitt, to my knowledge, is kind of unique as an urban state flagship with around 18-19k undergrads. U Toronto seems at least 3 times the size of a Pitt. Maybe they have other similarities or there are other similar schools, it depends what your student likes about Pitt.
Pitt isn't the flagship and it's not unique even in its own state: Temple is the same school, just in Philly.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Which schools share similar culture?
For e.g. which schools share the same culture as Brown?
For e.g. Duke shares somewhat of a similar culture like NU.
U Chicago with Caltech?
UT with Upitt?
Is UT for University of Texas or U Toronto? Not sure, Pitt, to my knowledge, is kind of unique as an urban state flagship with around 18-19k undergrads. U Toronto seems at least 3 times the size of a Pitt. Maybe they have other similarities or there are other similar schools, it depends what your student likes about Pitt.
Anonymous wrote:Which schools share similar culture?
For e.g. which schools share the same culture as Brown?
For e.g. Duke shares somewhat of a similar culture like NU.
U Chicago with Caltech?
UT with Upitt?
Anonymous wrote:Which schools share similar culture?
For e.g. which schools share the same culture as Brown?
For e.g. Duke shares somewhat of a similar culture like NU.
U Chicago with Caltech?
UT with Upitt?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:For Brown, consider other colleges with an open curriculum - Wesleyan, Vassar, Smith, Grinnell, etc.
Brown has more in common with other ivy pluses such as Yale, Columbia, Harvard, MIT than wesleyan's, Smith, or grinnel. In terms of information processing, there's a big difference between top 1% and top 3%.
No idea if that’s true or not. Top 1% of what? And how do you know that difference is present between Brown and the other schools? I’m extremely skeptical that Brown or any other Ivy makes admissions decisions based on information processing speed. Students don’t submit a battery of psych-ed tests with their applications, and neither SAT nor GPA tests that.
Cognitively there's a difference between 99th percentile and 97 percentile. Even if you have no idea, I think you'll agree Einstein and Newton are on a different level than the run-of-the-mill geniuses.
Anonymous wrote:Weslyan, Vassar, St Andrews (really), Bryan Mawr and Wellesley (if a girl)