Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Harvard
Stanford
MIT
Yale
Princeton
Caltech
Columbia
Chicago
Northwestern
Duke
Brown
Cornell
Johns Hopkins
Dartmouth
Georgetown
UC Berkeley
UCLA
Eh. Wouldn't include the UCs. Would add Rice, Penn, and Vanderbilt. Would lower Northwestern and Georgetown. CalTech, ok fine, brilliant but such a small, unique school for undergrad. Would add Michigan. People value STEM these days.
My personal real world list would be
MIT
Stanford
Harvard
Princeton
Duke
Penn
CalTech
Yale
Chicago
Brown
Columbia
Northwestern
Rice
Dartmouth
Vanderbilt
Michigan
Cornell
Georgetown
Carnegie Mellon
Johns Hopkins
UC-Berkeley
UCLA
Notre Dame
Williams
Amherst
Naval Academy
West Point
UVA
Anonymous wrote:Harvard
Stanford
MIT
Yale
Princeton
Caltech
Columbia
Chicago
Northwestern
Duke
Brown
Cornell
Johns Hopkins
Dartmouth
Georgetown
UC Berkeley
UCLA
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:BOGUSAnonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Here was another one; Have at it:
Undergraduate Tiers
1A) Harvard, Stanford, MIT, Yale, Princeton
1B) Columbia, Penn, Duke, Chicago, Caltech
2A) Northwestern, Brown, Dartmouth, Williams, Amherst
2B) Rice, Cornell, Pomona, Vanderbilt, Georgetown, Cal, Notre Dame, Emory, Swarthmore, UCLA, Wellesley
3A) Michigan, NYU, USC, UVA, Tufts, Middlebury, Barnard
3B)UNC, Boston College, W&M, Wake, W&L, Davidson
Tier 2A is very debatable is there are a lot of great schools that could go there.
Almost. If all that's being ranked is what's "elite" in 2024, I'd make a couple of changes:
1A) Harvard, Stanford, MIT, Princeton
1B) Yale, Duke, Penn, Caltech
1C) Chicago, Columbia
2A) Brown, Dartmouth, West Point, Annapolis, Williams, Amherst
2B) Northwestern, Cornell, Rice, Johns Hopkins, Vanderbilt, Pomona, Berkeley, Notre Dame
3A) Michigan, UCLA, Emory, Georgetown, Swarthmore
3B) UVA, Tufts, Wellesley, Carnegie Mellon, WashU, USC, NYU, Bowdoin
I think that's it for colleges that can plausibly be called elite.
Completely bogus, biased and baseless rating.. its just a fancy doodling
Where is selectivity or the acceptance rate.. thats one of the most important factor. Any univ / college that has acceptance rate greater than 15% cant be called as elite.
Another, over all endowment and endowment per student.. Any college / univ with less than $1Mn per student endowment cant be called as elite.
I like these two parameters, that's truly elite consideration.
So what are the colleges according to these two parameters?
Anonymous wrote:Harvard
Stanford
MIT
Yale
Princeton
Caltech
Columbia
Chicago
Northwestern
Duke
Brown
Cornell
Johns Hopkins
Dartmouth
Georgetown
UC Berkeley
UCLA
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Nowadays, many ivies are not elite enough. Penn is highly technical. Cornell is becoming an engineering + state uni. Brown is heavily leaning toward technical. For Columbia, only its Columbia College may be considered elite. General studies and Barnard are not even close.
That leaves HPY to remain as elite schools.
What happens to Dartmouth?
Aren't those Princeton rejects hidden in the mountains of New Hampshire?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Nowadays, many ivies are not elite enough. Penn is highly technical. Cornell is becoming an engineering + state uni. Brown is heavily leaning toward technical. For Columbia, only its Columbia College may be considered elite. General studies and Barnard are not even close.
That leaves HPY to remain as elite schools.
What happens to Dartmouth?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Nowadays, many ivies are not elite enough. Penn is highly technical. Cornell is becoming an engineering + state uni. Brown is heavily leaning toward technical. For Columbia, only its Columbia College may be considered elite. General studies and Barnard are not even close.
That leaves HPY to remain as elite schools.
Clearly you don’t work in finance or recruiting on the street.
Anonymous wrote:Nowadays, many ivies are not elite enough. Penn is highly technical. Cornell is becoming an engineering + state uni. Brown is heavily leaning toward technical. For Columbia, only its Columbia College may be considered elite. General studies and Barnard are not even close.
That leaves HPY to remain as elite schools.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Gotta be Northeastern
+1 Northeastern. Way harder to get into than Michigan.
Anonymous wrote:Nowadays, many ivies are not elite enough. Penn is highly technical. Cornell is becoming an engineering + state uni. Brown is heavily leaning toward technical. For Columbia, only its Columbia College may be considered elite. General studies and Barnard are not even close.
That leaves HPY to remain as elite schools.
Anonymous wrote:There are many excellent universities, but I limit this definition to the T15 schools (Ivy + Stanford, MIT, Caltech, Chicago, Northwestern, Duke and Johns Hopkins) + Amherst Williams Swarthmore
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Here was another one; Have at it:
Undergraduate Tiers
1A) Harvard, Stanford, MIT, Yale, Princeton
1B) Columbia, Penn, Duke, Chicago, Caltech
2A) Northwestern, Brown, Dartmouth, Williams, Amherst
2B) Rice, Cornell, Pomona, Vanderbilt, Georgetown, Cal, Notre Dame, Emory, Swarthmore, UCLA, Wellesley
3A) Michigan, NYU, USC, UVA, Tufts, Middlebury, Barnard
3B)UNC, Boston College, W&M, Wake, W&L, Davidson
Tier 2A is very debatable is there are a lot of great schools that could go there.
Almost. If all that's being ranked is what's "elite" in 2024, I'd make a couple of changes:
1A) Harvard, Stanford, MIT, Princeton
1B) Yale, Duke, Penn, Caltech
1C) Chicago, Columbia
2A) Brown, Dartmouth, West Point, Annapolis, Williams, Amherst
2B) Northwestern, Cornell, Rice, Johns Hopkins, Vanderbilt, Pomona, Berkeley, Notre Dame
3A) Michigan, UCLA, Emory, Georgetown, Swarthmore
3B) UVA, Tufts, Wellesley, Carnegie Mellon, WashU, USC, NYU, Bowdoin
I think that's it for colleges that can plausibly be called elite.
This is such a weird list
Undergraduate Tiers
1A) Harvard, Stanford, MIT, Yale, Princeton
1B) Caltech, Columbia, Penn (mainly bc of Wharton)
2A) Duke, Chicago, Northwestern, Brown, Dartmouth, Williams, Amherst
2B) Rice, Cornell, Pomona, Vanderbilt, Georgetown, Cal, Swarthmore
3A) Notre Dame, Emory, UCLA, Wellesley, Michigan, NYU, USC, UVA, Tufts, Middlebury, Barnard
3B)UNC, Boston College, W&M, Wake, W&L, Davidson
What the hell does this even mean, though? I would never assume 2As are better educated/more capable than 2Bs or 3As. I certainly wouldn't assume a UCLA grad is better educated/more capable than a W&L grad, for instance.