Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:From a purely academic, cultural, and quality standpoint, and not an athletic one (which, let's be honest, is the real relevance of the Ivy League), it's: Stanford, MIT, Duke, Chicago, Northwestern, and Johns Hopkins.
Let's not get into inane hypotheticals about DI vs DIII, or bring in lesser schools just for the sake of entertaining your own personal fantasy.
Same repeat poster in this thread.
Serious question: Which elite academic schools do you think would benefit from Ivy League membership ?
Stanford just doesn't need the Ivy League, and if Stanford joined the Ivy League, it would likely reduce Stanford's brand value. Brand value? It's clear you've never attended any of the schools in the Ivy League or on this list
Would Chicago be willing to give up its reputation for quirkiness and manipulative marketing tactics for Ivy membership ? Doubtful as Chicago has mastered its marketing scheme and doesn't need the Ivy brand. D-3, does not have football, would not spend the $ for athletics, alumni and faculty would revolt
MIT also seems to be doing fine on its own. How would MIT benefit from joining the Ivy League ? MIT already has a brand as powerful as Harvard and Stanford. And you want us to ignore athletics. D-3, would not jump to D-1 play, alumni and faculty would revolt
Duke ? Duke's culture includes a heavy athletic emphasis that would be greatly diminished by Ivy League membership. You think Duke is just about sports? Stanford is actually a better athletic performer across the board and has more student-athletes....This comment is funny
Northwestern has everything that it needs or wants in Big Ten membership regarding money, athletics, prestige, and research. Wouldn't go for it, why lose conference payout
That leaves Johns Hopkins from your list and Carnegie Mellon from mine. Both Johns Hopkins and Carnegie Mellon are D-3; alumni and faculty would revolt if they spent the money to go D-1, don't care enough about sports.
The Ivy League is a sports league. None of these schools get anything from joining. OK, so maybe a little application volume boost (so what? What does that do? You think at the end of the day that's the most important item to these billion-dollar organizations? If you asked the presidents and boards of any or all of these institutions what their top 3 (or even 5) biggest items on their agenda or areas of focus were, NONE would mention anything having to do with undergraduate admissions "brand").
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:From a purely academic, cultural, and quality standpoint, and not an athletic one (which, let's be honest, is the real relevance of the Ivy League), it's: Stanford, MIT, Duke, Chicago, Northwestern, and Johns Hopkins.
Let's not get into inane hypotheticals about DI vs DIII, or bring in lesser schools just for the sake of entertaining your own personal fantasy.
Same repeat poster in this thread.
Serious question: Which elite academic schools do you think would benefit from Ivy League membership ?
Stanford just doesn't need the Ivy League, and if Stanford joined the Ivy League, it would likely reduce Stanford's brand value.
Would Chicago be willing to give up its reputation for quirkiness and manipulative marketing tactics for Ivy membership ? Doubtful as Chicago has mastered its marketing scheme and doesn't need the Ivy brand.
MIT also seems to be doing fine on its own. How would MIT benefit from joining the Ivy League ? MIT already has a brand as powerful as Harvard and Stanford. And you want us to ignore athletics.
Duke ? Duke's culture includes a heavy athletic emphasis that would be greatly diminished by Ivy League membership.
Northwestern has everything that it needs or wants in Big Ten membership regarding money, athletics, prestige, and research.
That leaves Johns Hopkins from your list and Carnegie Mellon from mine.
Carnegie Mellon doesn't quite make the cut in terms of prestige/overall academics (though it shines in CS). Neither does Georgetown, as others in this thread have said.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:From a purely academic, cultural, and quality standpoint, and not an athletic one (which, let's be honest, is the real relevance of the Ivy League), it's: Stanford, MIT, Duke, Chicago, Northwestern, and Johns Hopkins.
Let's not get into inane hypotheticals about DI vs DIII, or bring in lesser schools just for the sake of entertaining your own personal fantasy.
Same repeat poster in this thread.
Serious question: Which elite academic schools do you think would benefit from Ivy League membership ?
Stanford just doesn't need the Ivy League, and if Stanford joined the Ivy League, it would likely reduce Stanford's brand value. Brand value? It's clear you've never attended any of the schools in the Ivy League or on this list
Would Chicago be willing to give up its reputation for quirkiness and manipulative marketing tactics for Ivy membership ? Doubtful as Chicago has mastered its marketing scheme and doesn't need the Ivy brand. D-3, does not have football, would not spend the $ for athletics, alumni and faculty would revolt
MIT also seems to be doing fine on its own. How would MIT benefit from joining the Ivy League ? MIT already has a brand as powerful as Harvard and Stanford. And you want us to ignore athletics. D-3, would not jump to D-1 play, alumni and faculty would revolt
Duke ? Duke's culture includes a heavy athletic emphasis that would be greatly diminished by Ivy League membership. You think Duke is just about sports? Stanford is actually a better athletic performer across the board and has more student-athletes....This comment is funny
Northwestern has everything that it needs or wants in Big Ten membership regarding money, athletics, prestige, and research. Wouldn't go for it, why lose conference payout
That leaves Johns Hopkins from your list and Carnegie Mellon from mine. Both Johns Hopkins and Carnegie Mellon are D-3; alumni and faculty would revolt if they spent the money to go D-1, don't care enough about sports.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:From a purely academic, cultural, and quality standpoint, and not an athletic one (which, let's be honest, is the real relevance of the Ivy League), it's: Stanford, MIT, Duke, Chicago, Northwestern, and Johns Hopkins.
Let's not get into inane hypotheticals about DI vs DIII, or bring in lesser schools just for the sake of entertaining your own personal fantasy.
Same repeat poster in this thread.
Serious question: Which elite academic schools do you think would benefit from Ivy League membership ?
Stanford just doesn't need the Ivy League, and if Stanford joined the Ivy League, it would likely reduce Stanford's brand value.
Would Chicago be willing to give up its reputation for quirkiness and manipulative marketing tactics for Ivy membership ? Doubtful as Chicago has mastered its marketing scheme and doesn't need the Ivy brand.
MIT also seems to be doing fine on its own. How would MIT benefit from joining the Ivy League ? MIT already has a brand as powerful as Harvard and Stanford. And you want us to ignore athletics.
Duke ? Duke's culture includes a heavy athletic emphasis that would be greatly diminished by Ivy League membership.
Northwestern has everything that it needs or wants in Big Ten membership regarding money, athletics, prestige, and research.
That leaves Johns Hopkins from your list and Carnegie Mellon from mine.
Anonymous wrote:From a purely academic, cultural, and quality standpoint, and not an athletic one (which, let's be honest, is the real relevance of the Ivy League), it's: Stanford, MIT, Duke, Chicago, Northwestern, and Johns Hopkins.
Let's not get into inane hypotheticals about DI vs DIII, or bring in lesser schools just for the sake of entertaining your own personal fantasy.
Anonymous wrote:From a purely academic, cultural, and quality standpoint, and not an athletic one (which, let's be honest, is the real relevance of the Ivy League), it's: Stanford, MIT, Duke, Chicago, Northwestern, and Johns Hopkins.
Let's not get into inane hypotheticals about DI vs DIII, or bring in lesser schools just for the sake of entertaining your own personal fantasy.