Anonymous wrote:SOOOOOO many "ties" in the SLAC category. I think its weird if 11 schools are tied for 30 that the next school is 41. Maybe they should shoot for fewer ties. It just seems to make the rankings not entirely clear.
Anonymous wrote:And the rise of the state schools? Some are legitimate like cal, UVA, Michigan and the like. But Georgia and Florida State are better than GW in anything other than football? What gives?
Anonymous wrote:My takeaways from reading the list:
Winners
-- Princeton (always lovely to be #1 by oneself)
-- JHU - all Bloomberg's $$ is paying off for them
-- Wake Forest is higher than I expected (plus having a great football season). Feels "hot"
-- Rice and Wash U above Cornell, Columbia and Notre Dame
Losers
-- Columbia, but they made their bed...
-- UNC and UVA downward trend, upward trend Michigan and Florida (even though still ranked lower than UNC)
-- Expected UT Austin to be higher
-- Tufts on a downward trajectory
Everything else kind of washed with previous years, imo
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:SOOOOOO many "ties" in the SLAC category. I think its weird if 11 schools are tied for 30 that the next school is 41. Maybe they should shoot for fewer ties. It just seems to make the rankings not entirely clear.
SLACs are boring
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:They just came out. The other thread was a guessing game. This is the real one. A few notes.
UVA 25, tied with Michigan and NYU
William & Mary at 42
UMD at 55
VT at 62
VT engineering ranked 16, above UMD’s 22
UVA undergrad business ranked 8
If you're going to touch on MD/ DC / VA schools:
JHU at 7
W&L at 11 ( LAC)
Georgetown at 22
Richmond at 18
Oh, and Georgetown at 22 for three times the price of UVA in state at 25 (and with the 8th ranked B-school)? Settles that argument.
Anonymous wrote:SOOOOOO many "ties" in the SLAC category. I think its weird if 11 schools are tied for 30 that the next school is 41. Maybe they should shoot for fewer ties. It just seems to make the rankings not entirely clear.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:SOOOOOO many "ties" in the SLAC category. I think its weird if 11 schools are tied for 30 that the next school is 41. Maybe they should shoot for fewer ties. It just seems to make the rankings not entirely clear.
SLACs are boring
Anonymous wrote:SOOOOOO many "ties" in the SLAC category. I think its weird if 11 schools are tied for 30 that the next school is 41. Maybe they should shoot for fewer ties. It just seems to make the rankings not entirely clear.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:U of Florida at 29. And Top 5 Public University! Go Gators!
Yes!!!!
Go Gators! I love how all the DC snobs gonna be like “where? Florida!?!?”
Anonymous wrote:U of Florida at 29. And Top 5 Public University! Go Gators!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:So it came out nicely for two divisions
T25 and T50 make sesnse by looking at the list.
You can still take pride in HYPMS, T10 or T20, but for the practical purpose in general
T25 and T20 is logical
I don't know about making sense. Once you hit 55 list is looney tunes. Florida State, Georgia, and Rutgers ranked higher than AU, GW, Syracuse, Pitt, and VA Tech? Insane. And all those second rate Cal schools in the mid thirties? Should be like in the 50s. Couple that with Duke, Northwestern, Hopkins (this one especially), and Chicago being so high. There is gamesmanship going on for sure. Columbia won't be the only one that gets caught. Employers and Grad schools know the prestigious schools.
totally agree on this - why are the 2nd rate UCs up there??
Maybe bcause they don't have many good shools in the West Coast, they get the benefit of affirmative action?
The uc schools like San Diego and Santa Barbara benefit from having a very qualified pool of both in state and out of state students. They also do well with research money.
SAT scores and accpetance rate doesn't agree with that.
All the UC schools are test blind.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:So it came out nicely for two divisions
T25 and T50 make sesnse by looking at the list.
You can still take pride in HYPMS, T10 or T20, but for the practical purpose in general
T25 and T20 is logical
I don't know about making sense. Once you hit 55 list is looney tunes. Florida State, Georgia, and Rutgers ranked higher than AU, GW, Syracuse, Pitt, and VA Tech? Insane. And all those second rate Cal schools in the mid thirties? Should be like in the 50s. Couple that with Duke, Northwestern, Hopkins (this one especially), and Chicago being so high. There is gamesmanship going on for sure. Columbia won't be the only one that gets caught. Employers and Grad schools know the prestigious schools.
totally agree on this - why are the 2nd rate UCs up there??
Maybe bcause they don't have many good shools in the West Coast, they get the benefit of affirmative action?
The uc schools like San Diego and Santa Barbara benefit from having a very qualified pool of both in state and out of state students. They also do well with research money.
SAT scores and accpetance rate doesn't agree with that.