Anonymous wrote:Cornell has some schools preferring state residents and it costs the same as state schools, that probably brings a good number of applications.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Rice is not prestigious outside of Texas. I highly recommend Cornell because public policy is a field where the institution you go to matters.
Agree. Rice is largely a regional school (37%of students are from TX).
Texas is a heavily populated stated - almost 30 million. That’s close to 10% of the US population. It’s the 2nd biggest state in the country.
41% of Stanford’s enrollment is from California, the nation’s largest state. Regional school?
34% of Harvard’s enrollment is from Mass, NY, and CT, which combine for the same population as TX. Regional school?
28% of MIT’s enrollment I’d from Mass, NY, NJ, and CT, all of which could fit into a corner ot TX. Regional school?
34% of Yale students are from those same 4 states. Regional school?
33% of Princeton students are from NJ and NY, which combine for the same population as TX. Regional school?
44% of Cornell Students also Come from NY and NJ. Regional school?
30% of Columbia students are also from NY/NJ. Regional school?
37% of Dartmouth students come from NY, NJ, and 4 New England states. Regional school?
38% of Penn students are from PA, NJ, MD, & DC with same population as TX. Regional school?
Shall I continue?
DP. It’s interesting that all these elite schools draw so heavily from their region. In the past, I’ve seen some DCUM posters denigrate Top 25 schools as “regionals.” Good to know that all the Ivies are “regionals” too!!!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Rice is not prestigious outside of Texas. I highly recommend Cornell because public policy is a field where the institution you go to matters.
Agree. Rice is largely a regional school (37%of students are from TX).
Texas is a heavily populated stated - almost 30 million. That’s close to 10% of the US population. It’s the 2nd biggest state in the country.
41% of Stanford’s enrollment is from California, the nation’s largest state. Regional school?
34% of Harvard’s enrollment is from Mass, NY, and CT, which combine for the same population as TX. Regional school?
28% of MIT’s enrollment I’d from Mass, NY, NJ, and CT, all of which could fit into a corner ot TX. Regional school?
34% of Yale students are from those same 4 states. Regional school?
33% of Princeton students are from NJ and NY, which combine for the same population as TX. Regional school?
44% of Cornell Students also Come from NY and NJ. Regional school?
30% of Columbia students are also from NY/NJ. Regional school?
37% of Dartmouth students come from NY, NJ, and 4 New England states. Regional school?
38% of Penn students are from PA, NJ, MD, & DC with same population as TX. Regional school?
Shall I continue?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Rice is not prestigious outside of Texas. I highly recommend Cornell because public policy is a field where the institution you go to matters.
Agree. Rice is largely a regional school (37%of students are from TX).
Texas is a heavily populated stated - almost 30 million. That’s close to 10% of the US population. It’s the 2nd biggest state in the country.
41% of Stanford’s enrollment is from California, the nation’s largest state. Regional school?
34% of Harvard’s enrollment is from Mass, NY, and CT, which combine for the same population as TX. Regional school?
28% of MIT’s enrollment I’d from Mass, NY, NJ, and CT, all of which could fit into a corner ot TX. Regional school?
34% of Yale students are from those same 4 states. Regional school?
33% of Princeton students are from NJ and NY, which combine for the same population as TX. Regional school?
44% of Cornell Students also Come from NY and NJ. Regional school?
30% of Columbia students are also from NY/NJ. Regional school?
37% of Dartmouth students come from NY, NJ, and 4 New England states. Regional school?
38% of Penn students are from PA, NJ, MD, & DC with same population as TX. Regional school?
Shall I continue?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Rice is not prestigious outside of Texas. I highly recommend Cornell because public policy is a field where the institution you go to matters.
Agree. Rice is largely a regional school (37%of students are from TX).
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Unless you want your child to be happy, in which case, Rice.
Such an ignorant, useless comment.
Anonymous wrote:Rice is not prestigious outside of Texas. I highly recommend Cornell because public policy is a field where the institution you go to matters.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:For someone interested in health policy, Rice has the advantage of having the largest medical complex in the country across the street. Cornell’s medical school and related hospitals are 250 miles away in NYC.
I work in "health policy" and have never met a Rice grad. I am from Dallas so I do know some Rice grads, but none of them are in the "health policy" field here in DC.
Anonymous wrote:Unless you want your child to be happy, in which case, Rice.
Anonymous wrote:For someone interested in health policy, Rice has the advantage of having the largest medical complex in the country across the street. Cornell’s medical school and related hospitals are 250 miles away in NYC.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Really depends on the kid. My kid is happy at Cornell. He would not want to be in Texas.
Mine too. Would much rather be cold than hot.
College is off from first week of may to august so you only deal with few hot weeks, Cornell is open for most of the dead winter so you really have to like cold.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Really depends on the kid. My kid is happy at Cornell. He would not want to be in Texas.
Mine too. Would much rather be cold than hot.