Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:For schools outside T10, you select schools by major, not by brand. Non-t10 schools typically have something strong going on, but not all around winners.
Some T10s aren't all around winners either. I wouldn’t go to Caltech or JHU for business/finance. A Emory would be much better for that.
By their DNA, Caltech and JHU are research universities. Yeah, you would rather go to CMC for finance than Caltech.
Emory is exactly what it means for selection by major.
if they are getting into caltech or jhu, they wouldnt be going to trash like emory as an alternative choice
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Also, I suspect a Caltech graduate would not have any problem landing a quant job. Just none would be even remotely interested in doing that.
quant jobs are hard even for caltech grads
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:For schools outside T10, you select schools by major, not by brand. Non-t10 schools typically have something strong going on, but not all around winners.
Some T10s aren't all around winners either. I wouldn’t go to Caltech or JHU for business/finance. A Emory would be much better for that.
By their DNA, Caltech and JHU are research universities. Yeah, you would rather go to CMC for finance than Caltech.
Emory is exactly what it means for selection by major.
Would go to jhu econ 100x over emory's lackluster undergrad bschool.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:For schools outside T10, you select schools by major, not by brand. Non-t10 schools typically have something strong going on, but not all around winners.
Some T10s aren't all around winners either. I wouldn’t go to Caltech or JHU for business/finance. A Emory would be much better for that.
By their DNA, Caltech and JHU are research universities. Yeah, you would rather go to CMC for finance than Caltech.
Emory is exactly what it means for selection by major.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:For schools outside T10, you select schools by major, not by brand. Non-t10 schools typically have something strong going on, but not all around winners.
Some T10s aren't all around winners either. I wouldn’t go to Caltech or JHU for business/finance. A Emory would be much better for that.
By their DNA, Caltech and JHU are research universities. Yeah, you would rather go to CMC for finance than Caltech.
Emory is exactly what it means for selection by major.
Anonymous wrote:Also, I suspect a Caltech graduate would not have any problem landing a quant job. Just none would be even remotely interested in doing that.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:For schools outside T10, you select schools by major, not by brand. Non-t10 schools typically have something strong going on, but not all around winners.
Some T10s aren't all around winners either. I wouldn’t go to Caltech or JHU for business/finance. A Emory would be much better for that.
By their DNA, Caltech and JHU are research universities. Yeah, you would rather go to CMC for finance than Caltech.
Emory is exactly what it means for selection by major.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:For schools outside T10, you select schools by major, not by brand. Non-t10 schools typically have something strong going on, but not all around winners.
Some T10s aren't all around winners either. I wouldn’t go to Caltech or JHU for business/finance. A Emory would be much better for that.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:For schools outside T10, you select schools by major, not by brand. Non-t10 schools typically have something strong going on, but not all around winners.
Some T10s aren't all around winners either. I wouldn’t go to Caltech or JHU for business/finance. A Emory would be much better for that.
Anonymous wrote:For schools outside T10, you select schools by major, not by brand. Non-t10 schools typically have something strong going on, but not all around winners.