Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:No, the schools dislike all of the rankings. The others just don't get enough eyeballs for them to actually complain about!
Unfortunately for those outlets, they are hardly part of the conversation.
At the very least, Wall Street Journal, Forbes, and Niche definitely get lots of eyeballs. Anytime you google rankings Niche is always one of the first to pop up.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Ranking college makes no sense at all. What is the point?
Coming from a different country, rankings have been useful in understanding the college landscape. Of course they're not meant to be the only consideration, but they help give a general sense of where things stand. I never would have known, for example, that Rice is a very good university.
+1 in my country we only knew a few American schools like MIT, Harvard, Caltech, Duke, Stanford, and a few others. There are many more great universities that we didn’t know about until coming here.
So are all the rankings obsessed posters on here immigrants? They rely on the rankings to learn about schools they don’t hear about in movies or overseas? I never understood the obsession with USNWR, but this makes more sense.
Yes, because immigrants are the ones with tens of thousands of dollars to spend on private college counselors and test prep resources to get their kids into the top schools. Not to mention the hundreds of thousands spent on getting kids into top schools through niche sports. Or straight up buying seats at top universities as seen through Varsity Blues. Only immigrants do all that, no white people would ever be that obsessed!![]()
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+1 calling the ranking obsession an immigrant phenomenon is laughable. Look at the demographics of the top boarding schools that feed into these top schools and it’s very obvious that immigrants are far from the only people who want to get their kids into Harvard, Duke, etc.
Are you really going to claim that some cultures are not more into status (ie. name brands) than others? Look at wedding traditions.
I actually know someone who included the name of their kid's college in her wedding invitation. NO American would have done that.
(Note: lots of Americans are status conscious, don't get me wrong, but such displays if status/money are definitely very common in some Asian cultures. )
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Ranking college makes no sense at all. What is the point?
Coming from a different country, rankings have been useful in understanding the college landscape. Of course they're not meant to be the only consideration, but they help give a general sense of where things stand. I never would have known, for example, that Rice is a very good university.
+1 in my country we only knew a few American schools like MIT, Harvard, Caltech, Duke, Stanford, and a few others. There are many more great universities that we didn’t know about until coming here.
So are all the rankings obsessed posters on here immigrants? They rely on the rankings to learn about schools they don’t hear about in movies or overseas? I never understood the obsession with USNWR, but this makes more sense.
Yes, because immigrants are the ones with tens of thousands of dollars to spend on private college counselors and test prep resources to get their kids into the top schools. Not to mention the hundreds of thousands spent on getting kids into top schools through niche sports. Or straight up buying seats at top universities as seen through Varsity Blues. Only immigrants do all that, no white people would ever be that obsessed!![]()
![]()
![]()
+1 calling the ranking obsession an immigrant phenomenon is laughable. Look at the demographics of the top boarding schools that feed into these top schools and it’s very obvious that immigrants are far from the only people who want to get their kids into Harvard, Duke, etc.
Are you really going to claim that some cultures are not more into status (ie. name brands) than others? Look at wedding traditions.
I actually know someone who included the name of their kid's college in her wedding invitation. NO American would have done that.
(Note: lots of Americans are status conscious, don't get me wrong, but such displays if status/money are definitely very common in some Asian cultures. )
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Ranking college makes no sense at all. What is the point?
Coming from a different country, rankings have been useful in understanding the college landscape. Of course they're not meant to be the only consideration, but they help give a general sense of where things stand. I never would have known, for example, that Rice is a very good university.
+1 in my country we only knew a few American schools like MIT, Harvard, Caltech, Duke, Stanford, and a few others. There are many more great universities that we didn’t know about until coming here.
So are all the rankings obsessed posters on here immigrants? They rely on the rankings to learn about schools they don’t hear about in movies or overseas? I never understood the obsession with USNWR, but this makes more sense.
Yes, because immigrants are the ones with tens of thousands of dollars to spend on private college counselors and test prep resources to get their kids into the top schools. Not to mention the hundreds of thousands spent on getting kids into top schools through niche sports. Or straight up buying seats at top universities as seen through Varsity Blues. Only immigrants do all that, no white people would ever be that obsessed!![]()
![]()
![]()
+1 calling the ranking obsession an immigrant phenomenon is laughable. Look at the demographics of the top boarding schools that feed into these top schools and it’s very obvious that immigrants are far from the only people who want to get their kids into Harvard, Duke, etc.
Are you really going to claim that some cultures are not more into status (ie. name brands) than others? Look at wedding traditions.
I actually know someone who included the name of their kid's college in her wedding invitation. NO American would have done that.
(Note: lots of Americans are status conscious, don't get me wrong, but such displays if status/money are definitely very common in some Asian cultures. )
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:But why? Can't you just find a list of quality schools (like Princeton Review's Best Colleges in America) and choose a list that matches your child's grades, major, geographic and size preferences, Greek or no, urban or no, etc. Basically, fit.
Feeling the need to KNOW the rank seems so status conscious. It also is not a good gauge of quality. None of the lists you included, for example, rate best teaching. Think about that.
+1 for the most part they are evaluating inputs -- the quality of the students (test scores) or how much money the college has. Not actual results. What would be more interesting would be large scale surveys of alumni but that would be massively expensive to do it on a large enough scale.
One thing some colleges share is their NSSE results (National Survey of Student Engagement) https://nsse.indiana.edu/nsse/. You have to look on a college's institutional research page to find it, if available. Or ask for it.
Anonymous wrote:But why? Can't you just find a list of quality schools (like Princeton Review's Best Colleges in America) and choose a list that matches your child's grades, major, geographic and size preferences, Greek or no, urban or no, etc. Basically, fit.
Feeling the need to KNOW the rank seems so status conscious. It also is not a good gauge of quality. None of the lists you included, for example, rate best teaching. Think about that.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Ranking college makes no sense at all. What is the point?
Coming from a different country, rankings have been useful in understanding the college landscape. Of course they're not meant to be the only consideration, but they help give a general sense of where things stand. I never would have known, for example, that Rice is a very good university.
+1 in my country we only knew a few American schools like MIT, Harvard, Caltech, Duke, Stanford, and a few others. There are many more great universities that we didn’t know about until coming here.
So are all the rankings obsessed posters on here immigrants? They rely on the rankings to learn about schools they don’t hear about in movies or overseas? I never understood the obsession with USNWR, but this makes more sense.
Yes, because immigrants are the ones with tens of thousands of dollars to spend on private college counselors and test prep resources to get their kids into the top schools. Not to mention the hundreds of thousands spent on getting kids into top schools through niche sports. Or straight up buying seats at top universities as seen through Varsity Blues. Only immigrants do all that, no white people would ever be that obsessed!![]()
![]()
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+1 calling the ranking obsession an immigrant phenomenon is laughable. Look at the demographics of the top boarding schools that feed into these top schools and it’s very obvious that immigrants are far from the only people who want to get their kids into Harvard, Duke, etc.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Ranking college makes no sense at all. What is the point?
Coming from a different country, rankings have been useful in understanding the college landscape. Of course they're not meant to be the only consideration, but they help give a general sense of where things stand. I never would have known, for example, that Rice is a very good university.
+1 in my country we only knew a few American schools like MIT, Harvard, Caltech, Duke, Stanford, and a few others. There are many more great universities that we didn’t know about until coming here.
So are all the rankings obsessed posters on here immigrants? They rely on the rankings to learn about schools they don’t hear about in movies or overseas? I never understood the obsession with USNWR, but this makes more sense.
Yes, because immigrants are the ones with tens of thousands of dollars to spend on private college counselors and test prep resources to get their kids into the top schools. Not to mention the hundreds of thousands spent on getting kids into top schools through niche sports. Or straight up buying seats at top universities as seen through Varsity Blues. Only immigrants do all that, no white people would ever be that obsessed!![]()
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Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Ranking college makes no sense at all. What is the point?
Coming from a different country, rankings have been useful in understanding the college landscape. Of course they're not meant to be the only consideration, but they help give a general sense of where things stand. I never would have known, for example, that Rice is a very good university.
But there are many other very good universities not on the lists you are limiting yourself to, and that fact that there is a list is making you think the education form Rice is better than a school on a different list or ranked lower, etc.
Can you name a few?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Ranking college makes no sense at all. What is the point?
+100 a “very good” university, per any ranking, doesn’t mean it’s good for all students.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Ranking college makes no sense at all. What is the point?
Coming from a different country, rankings have been useful in understanding the college landscape. Of course they're not meant to be the only consideration, but they help give a general sense of where things stand. I never would have known, for example, that Rice is a very good university.
+1 in my country we only knew a few American schools like MIT, Harvard, Caltech, Duke, Stanford, and a few others. There are many more great universities that we didn’t know about until coming here.
So are all the rankings obsessed posters on here immigrants? They rely on the rankings to learn about schools they don’t hear about in movies or overseas? I never understood the obsession with USNWR, but this makes more sense.
Anonymous wrote:Ranking college makes no sense at all. What is the point?