Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Most folks don't really know all the schools.
For instance in Mass most folks know Boston University, Northeastern and Harvard which are three of the four largest colleges in Mass.
But surprisingly to me at least UMASS Amherst is the largest college in that state.
I doubt most people even know the difference between Boston University & Boston College. Or UNC-Chapel Hill & NC State or Wesleyan (the highly ranked SLAC in CT) & Ohio Wesleyan. Or....
Most people probably couldn't accurately name all the Ivys either. My cousin from Boston, for instance, recently asked me if Providence was an Ivy League school. And he is highly educated!
So, yeah, just because someone (on or off this board) hasn't heard of a school or know that it is highly ranked doesn't mean that it isn't an excellent school.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Most folks don't really know all the schools.
For instance in Mass most folks know Boston University, Northeastern and Harvard which are three of the four largest colleges in Mass.
But surprisingly to me at least UMASS Amherst is the largest college in that state.
I doubt most people even know the difference between Boston University & Boston College. Or UNC-Chapel Hill & NC State or Wesleyan (the highly ranked SLAC in CT) & Ohio Wesleyan. Or....
Most people probably couldn't accurately name all the Ivys either. My cousin from Boston, for instance, recently asked me if Providence was an Ivy League school. And he is highly educated!
So, yeah, just because someone (on or off this board) hasn't heard of a school or know that it is highly ranked doesn't mean that it isn't an excellent school.
Anonymous wrote:Most folks don't really know all the schools.
For instance in Mass most folks know Boston University, Northeastern and Harvard which are three of the four largest colleges in Mass.
But surprisingly to me at least UMASS Amherst is the largest college in that state.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:That says more about you than it does about Davidson![]()
It says: I’m not from the south and I don’t know all of the little regional colleges down there.
That "little regional college" is ranked 10th liberal arts college in the country, ahead of Smith, Vassar, Wesleyan, Oberlin (have you heard of those?).
Not the PP, but the colleges you mention are much better known than Davidson, which is virtually unknown to most.
Most of the people who matter (ie hiring managers, grad school admissions officers) have heard of it -- & hold its graduates in high regard.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What school isn't regional? 40% of Harvard students are from New England. Stanford is 35% from California alone, probably 40% if you add in the West Coast states. Regionalism is a feature at every school out there.
This. DH is a VP of Marketing and Sales Strategy for a national education technology company and has worked in university administration. He has told me many times that ALL schools are ultimately regional, even the top ones. He has said that the number one predictor for where a kid will apply is where that kid lives. Doesn't matter if it's Harvard or a community college. That even applies to online programs, weirdly enough.
Anonymous wrote:What school isn't regional? 40% of Harvard students are from New England. Stanford is 35% from California alone, probably 40% if you add in the West Coast states. Regionalism is a feature at every school out there.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:That says more about you than it does about Davidson![]()
It says: I’m not from the south and I don’t know all of the little regional colleges down there.
That "little regional college" is ranked 10th liberal arts college in the country, ahead of Smith, Vassar, Wesleyan, Oberlin (have you heard of those?).
Not the PP, but the colleges you mention are much better known than Davidson, which is virtually unknown to most.
Most of the people who matter (ie hiring managers, grad school admissions officers) have heard of it -- & hold its graduates in high regard.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:That says more about you than it does about Davidson![]()
It says: I’m not from the south and I don’t know all of the little regional colleges down there.
That "little regional college" is ranked 10th liberal arts college in the country, ahead of Smith, Vassar, Wesleyan, Oberlin (have you heard of those?).
Not the PP, but the colleges you mention are much better known than Davidson, which is virtually unknown to most.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:That says more about you than it does about Davidson![]()
It says: I’m not from the south and I don’t know all of the little regional colleges down there.
That "little regional college" is ranked 10th liberal arts college in the country, ahead of Smith, Vassar, Wesleyan, Oberlin (have you heard of those?).
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Surprised to see anyone going South given all the liberals here and the hatred of anything outside of the NE.
It's amazing the places people will consider once the Ivies and their own state publics have turned them down.
Duke, Rice, Vanderbilt, Davidson - yeah, it's an academic wasteland south of the Mason=dixon line
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Those aren't the schools, I meant --- UGA, UF, Alabama, Tennessee, South Carolina -- decent schools, but not the caliber that usually impresses posters here.
Who cares what impresses random people on DCUM?
good point! I have been humbled myself by DC's results this year. Not so judgmental anymore.![]()