Anonymous wrote:It's because they reject 91.3% of applicants and those people say and type things.
Anonymous wrote:It's only called a lower Ivy by those who are insecure about their degree from a higher-ranked college.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:HYP no longer makes sense since Yale has not kept up with peers, particularly in STEM. I would put Penn above Yale.
Your views are irrelevant.
Same to you.
I remember back in the 1970s when the thick Barron’s Guide to Colleges was very influential. It ranked colleges in categories for the difficulty of admissions. Their tiers were Most Competitive, Highly Competitive, Very Competitive, Competitive, Less Competitive, and Non-Competitive. Cornell & Penn were Highly Competitive, as was UVA.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:People may compare Cornell to Emory, Vanderbilt, Wash U, etc. but at the end of the day Cornell has way better name recognition than any of these schools. And it is also has a strong global brand. An ivy is an ivy I guess
True, the perception is a lie, and the outcomes tell the true story. Eventually those 3 will pass in name brand if this continues. 2 have already passed Cornell in ranking.
But anyone looking to go to college now will be middle aged at the earliest if and when that actually happens. Cornell is a global brand in the way the three others are still trying to be. Especially in East Asia and India, the Ivy connection is more important than it should be. Vandy has significantly more name recognition than the other two. I know an Emory faculty member who doesn't even put it at the level of Cornell, at least not reputation wise. I don't get the impression Emory sees itself as a true peer of Vandy. It wants to be in that Vandy and Duke discussion though.
Its funny how these things change over time. I can remember in the 1980s when Penn was the "bottom Ivy" and everyone I knew would rank Cornell higher than Brown and equal or better than Dartmouth. Cornell was ranked #8 in the first US News ranking in 1983.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:People may compare Cornell to Emory, Vanderbilt, Wash U, etc. but at the end of the day Cornell has way better name recognition than any of these schools. And it is also has a strong global brand. An ivy is an ivy I guess
True, the perception is a lie, and the outcomes tell the true story. Eventually those 3 will pass in name brand if this continues. 2 have already passed Cornell in ranking.
Anonymous wrote:People may compare Cornell to Emory, Vanderbilt, Wash U, etc. but at the end of the day Cornell has way better name recognition than any of these schools. And it is also has a strong global brand. An ivy is an ivy I guess
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Someone posted another thread, but Cornell has placement per capita for med school that doesn't keep pace with the other ivys, but instead Vandy, Emory, WashU, etc. This reiterates the point that these schools have caught up with Cornell.
https://www.dcurbanmom.com/jforum/posts/list/1149442.page
Cornell does not have placement for med school like other Ivies because it is not like other Ivies. Cornell is very heavily represented in majors where the kids have self selected away from any potential med school interest. 6 of the 7 undergrad colleges probably don't send a single student on to med school in a given graduation class. Hotel Administration, ALS (agriculture), ILR (industrial labor relations), Human Ecology, Dyson/Buysiness, and Architecture are sending nobody to med school. And precious few of Cornell's several hundred CS/Engineeting grads each year are going to med school either. Only Arts & Sciences (under 50% of each Cornell class) will have kids going to med school after graduation.