Anonymous wrote:Columbia will fall out of top ten when they return to rankings.
Anonymous wrote:https://www.law360.com/articles/1511067/columbia-hit-with-class-claims-over-inaccurate-ranking-stats
Keep getting worse for Columbia
Anonymous wrote:Columbia gamed the system at USNews, like Northeastern and others, to climb the rankings. Period.
Anonymous wrote:I wish the USNWR rankings would just go away. They've caused more harm than good over the years.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Love the whatsboutism in this thread. Columbia got caught being fraudulent. The end.
When dating, did you tell your future spouse that you'll be fat, ugly, grumpy, and negative when you are old? That you aren't as charming as you appear, that you are in reality a defecating and stinking human being? If not, you must be a fraud. The end.
Anonymous wrote:Love the whatsboutism in this thread. Columbia got caught being fraudulent. The end.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What are the damages? There are no damages 2 vs 14. Any future income is too speculative. How had anyone been harmed?
Right? What is the dollar value of being able to boast you attended a school rated #2 by a magazine, based on criteria that say nothing about the quality of the education you, as in individual undergrad, actually received?
If Columbia had deliberately lied about its data and bragged about its ranking at USNWR to encourage students to apply, then there could be a liability issue.
Practically EVERY institution does the same thing, PP. I'm not giving you an argument about liability, but it's important to understand that no institution is fully honest when it comes to reporting data for rankings.
No they don’t. Not to this extent for sure.
Only if you can prove it.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What are the damages? There are no damages 2 vs 14. Any future income is too speculative. How had anyone been harmed?
Right? What is the dollar value of being able to boast you attended a school rated #2 by a magazine, based on criteria that say nothing about the quality of the education you, as in individual undergrad, actually received?
If Columbia had deliberately lied about its data and bragged about its ranking at USNWR to encourage students to apply, then there could be a liability issue.
Practically EVERY institution does the same thing, PP. I'm not giving you an argument about liability, but it's important to understand that no institution is fully honest when it comes to reporting data for rankings.
No they don’t. Not to this extent for sure.
Only if you can prove it.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What are the damages? There are no damages 2 vs 14. Any future income is too speculative. How had anyone been harmed?
Right? What is the dollar value of being able to boast you attended a school rated #2 by a magazine, based on criteria that say nothing about the quality of the education you, as in individual undergrad, actually received?
If Columbia had deliberately lied about its data and bragged about its ranking at USNWR to encourage students to apply, then there could be a liability issue.
Practically EVERY institution does the same thing, PP. I'm not giving you an argument about liability, but it's important to understand that no institution is fully honest when it comes to reporting data for rankings.
No they don’t. Not to this extent for sure.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What are the damages? There are no damages 2 vs 14. Any future income is too speculative. How had anyone been harmed?
Right? What is the dollar value of being able to boast you attended a school rated #2 by a magazine, based on criteria that say nothing about the quality of the education you, as in individual undergrad, actually received?
If Columbia had deliberately lied about its data and bragged about its ranking at USNWR to encourage students to apply, then there could be a liability issue.
Practically EVERY institution does the same thing, PP. I'm not giving you an argument about liability, but it's important to understand that no institution is fully honest when it comes to reporting data for rankings.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What are the damages? There are no damages 2 vs 14. Any future income is too speculative. How had anyone been harmed?
Right? What is the dollar value of being able to boast you attended a school rated #2 by a magazine, based on criteria that say nothing about the quality of the education you, as in individual undergrad, actually received?
If Columbia had deliberately lied about its data and bragged about its ranking at USNWR to encourage students to apply, then there could be a liability issue.