Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Campus safety is a weird metric to include but the rest of the metrics make sense to me.
The other metrics make sense to me, too. But actually measuring things like the components of “campus experience” gets pretty subjective, which makes this ranking less valuable to me.
PP again. To be clear, why include some components but not others, like the pct of classes taught by TAs or the availability of on-campus tutoring centers. How about clubs or intramural sports or what have you. How about the percent who live on campus vs off, or student rankings for the food. How about the pct of students taken to the hospital for alcohol poisoning every year? Random, I know. But I’m trying to say the “undergraduate experience” includes so many things and the choice inevitably biases the index.
Whereas measures like SATs, # research papers published, or pct graduating and finding a job within six months are easier to agree on. Even if things like starting salaries are subject to different interpretations (is it a good thing that half the class goes into investment banking?).
Call me an index skeptic.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:https://wallethub.com/edu/college-rankings/40750/?utm_source=&utm_medium=&utm_campaign=
" In order to determine the best higher-education institutions in the U.S., WalletHub’s analysts compared 973 colleges and universities across seven key dimensions: 1) Student Selectivity, 2) Cost & Financing, 3) Faculty Resources, 4) Campus Safety, 5) Campus Experience, 6) Educational Outcomes and 7) Career Outcomes."
Top 20
1. MIT
2.Princeton
3.Harvard
4.Stanford
5.Caltech
6.Yale
7.Duke
8.Penn
9.Columbia
10.Rice
11.UCB
12.Harvey Mudd
13.JHU
14.Brown
15.Pomona
16.ND
17.Dartmouth
18.Vandy
19.Williams
20.UChicago
Another useless ranking based on stupid premises ...just a marketing tool
Truly. never even heard of wallethub. USN&WR and Forbes and Princeton are the only ones to care about. Everyone here should be reading Collegeconfidential not getting their info from DCUM.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:lol
If money were no object very few would choose Berkeley over Brown, Dartmouth, Hopkins, Williams or Chicago.
Many would choose Berkeley over Brown, Dartmouth, Hopkins, Williams especially for STEM and CS.
Anonymous wrote:lol
If money were no object very few would choose Berkeley over Brown, Dartmouth, Hopkins, Williams or Chicago.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:https://wallethub.com/edu/college-rankings/40750/?utm_source=&utm_medium=&utm_campaign=
" In order to determine the best higher-education institutions in the U.S., WalletHub’s analysts compared 973 colleges and universities across seven key dimensions: 1) Student Selectivity, 2) Cost & Financing, 3) Faculty Resources, 4) Campus Safety, 5) Campus Experience, 6) Educational Outcomes and 7) Career Outcomes."
Top 20
1. MIT
2.Princeton
3.Harvard
4.Stanford
5.Caltech
6.Yale
7.Duke
8.Penn
9.Columbia
10.Rice
11.UCB
12.Harvey Mudd
13.JHU
14.Brown
15.Pomona
16.ND
17.Dartmouth
18.Vandy
19.Williams
20.UChicago
Another useless ranking based on stupid premises ...just a marketing tool
Anonymous wrote:I wish there were a way to create your own ranking with the values that were important to you. Maybe you don't care about faculty salaries, but you do want classes under 20 students and a high percent of classes taught by PhDs. Maybe you don't care about diversity, but you do care about retention and graduation rates.
I think that it's telling that the same schools constantly make the top of these lists for undergrad rankings, but the order shifts around depending on the factors weighted. As such, it's best to think in tiers or groupings rather than #1 vs #5.
Rice cannot rank higher than UCB.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Campus safety is a weird metric to include but the rest of the metrics make sense to me.
The other metrics make sense to me, too. But actually measuring things like the components of “campus experience” gets pretty subjective, which makes this ranking less valuable to me.
Anonymous wrote:Campus safety is a weird metric to include but the rest of the metrics make sense to me.