Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This thread would be useful if it asked if one prefers public vs. private, assuming no cost difference. But, by noting specific schools, OP really wants to start another useless rankings/prestige thread.
Yes they are and slyly wants to equate Berkeley and Michigan to U CHICAGO AND PENN?!?!
Anonymous wrote:Say, UVA vs WashU/Vandy/Emory/Rice?
Berkeley vs UChicago/Northwestern/Duke?
Michigan vs Penn/Brown/Cornell?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:A top private. No question. The professors are more involved with undergraduates and the research opportunities are unquestionably more available to undergrads.
PS since when is UVA a “top school”? No one outside this area ever thinks or considers it.
Many of the top privates universities have more graduate students than undergraduate. This is the opposite of all of the top publics that serve both. Do you honestly believe the professors at Harvard, for example, are spending more time with undergrads than grad students? Research opportunities are very abundant at a school like Michigan. Only JHU has a larger research budget. You are misinformed.
Anonymous wrote:WashU, Emory , Rice are better undergrad schools than every public school.
Anonymous wrote:This question is way to broad as every student has specific wants from a school and interests. Personally, I attended UCLA and loved the big public school experience. I was in a sorority, went to as many games as I could, and actually enjoyed classes with hundreds of diverse students. Although certain smaller schools are more prestigious and "elite", I wouldn't pick Dartmouth over UCLA. I was also a history major, so I wouldn't want to attend MIT or Caltech.
More broadly though, I believe there would be more opportunities at Harvard/Yale/Stanford than Berkeley or Michigan and certainly UCLA!
Anonymous wrote:This question is way to broad as every student has specific wants from a school and interests. Personally, I attended UCLA and loved the big public school experience. I was in a sorority, went to as many games as I could, and actually enjoyed classes with hundreds of diverse students. Although certain smaller schools are more prestigious and "elite", I wouldn't pick Dartmouth over UCLA. I was also a history major, so I wouldn't want to attend MIT or Caltech.
More broadly though, I believe there would be more opportunities at Harvard/Yale/Stanford than Berkeley or Michigan.
Anonymous wrote:A top private. No question. The professors are more involved with undergraduates and the research opportunities are unquestionably more available to undergrads.
PS since when is UVA a “top school”? No one outside this area ever thinks or considers it.
Anonymous wrote:WashU, Emory , Rice are better undergrad schools than every public school.
Anonymous wrote:A top private. No question. The professors are more involved with undergraduates and the research opportunities are unquestionably more available to undergrads.
PS since when is UVA a “top school”? No one outside this area ever thinks or considers it.