Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I never hear anyone mention it any more. I know that it is still a very fine school (and two of my siblings went there) -- but are kids less interested? Or is it just my kid's friends who aren't interested?
It just feels like a pre-med school
+1. Great for pre-med, mid for almost everything else.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I never hear anyone mention it any more. I know that it is still a very fine school (and two of my siblings went there) -- but are kids less interested? Or is it just my kid's friends who aren't interested?
It just feels like a pre-med school
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It’s a great school, but in a terrible location. DC took a tour and crossed it off the list based on surrounding area
Yale, Columbia, and Chicago have done just fine with their locations in the not-so-distant past. Hopefully that portion of Baltimore will continue to improve.
Hopkins also has the benefit of the name recognition that its med school and hospital provide. It was a popular school for kids in Mountain View and Palo Alto, CA to look at when I was out there.
Columbia's immediate surroundings are less than ideal but it's based on NYC, a global city. Manhattan is extremely safe for such a large city by American standards.
Chicago's immediate surroundings are pretty bad but again it's based in the 3rd largest American city. It's a matter of knowing which neighborhoods of a the city to avoid.
Baltimore is the 30th largest city in the US, smaller than Memphis, Tennessee and Portland, Oregon. The entire city is dangerous and rundown with very few, small pockets of relative safety.
Anonymous wrote:Here’s a ranking of undergraduate international studies programs. https://www.collegefactual.com/majors/social-sciences/international-relations-national-security/rankings/top-ranked/bachelors-degrees/
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You guys are idiots. It’s also top ranked in public policy, economics, etc. It’s hospital and medical research are world renowned, but it’s global policy program is renowned world wide too.
What ranking are you using? The public affairs school is ranked 35, same as UMD. Its Economics program is ranked 22, same as UMD.
https://www.usnews.com/best-graduate-schools/top-public-affairs-schools/public-affairs-rankings?_sort=rank-asc
https://www.usnews.com/best-graduate-schools/top-humanities-schools/economics-rankings?_sort=rank-asc
It's ranked 4 for Global Policy and Administration Programs, but that is for the graduate school SAIS which is based in DC, 1 hour away during off-peak hours by car. SAIS professors live in DC so the undergrads in Baltimore get little to no benefit from the graduate school.
Actually some SAIS professors teach at the undergrad campus and the 5 year ba/ma program is popular. Hopkins also has campuses in Bologna and Beijing.
The few that do will be the ones just starting out, not the world-renowned ones that gets Hopkins it's top 4 ranking.
I'm sure the BA/MA program is great but not particularly advantageous over Georgetown or Columbia, which both have 5-year BA/MA programs and are located in much better cities for anything international policy-related as an undergrad.
Spending 4 years in a school you do not want to go to just so you can get into the 1-year masters programs seems to be overkill, especially when that student could probably get into a top masters elsewhere in Harvard, Columbia or Georgetown.
eAnonymous wrote:Hopkins is obviously a very good school, but it's particularly renowned for MD. I'm sure there's some advantages that pre-meds have as well due to having two major medical research universities located in the city, in both research and shadowing opportunities.
Beyond pre-med, it's not particularly known for anything else academically or career-wise. It does not have a big tech/engineering culture and isn't a hotspot for tech startups, incubators or recruiting into top tech firms. It doesn't have the network or history of recruitment into Wall Street finance firms and Big 3 consulting firms and its MBA is extremely mediocre. It's not particularly renowned for political activism although that's a positive. It doesn't have a law school although that's probably another positive. The last two points probably lead to the lack of Hopkins alumni in Congress.
A lot of the high ranking that Hopkins gets is due to programs that undergrad students get zero access to because it's in a different city altogether and requires car + commute time to access. The federal government's Applied Physics Lab is run by Hopkins and brings in the biggest federal research dollars along with the medical school, but it's in Laurel - a 30 minute drive minimum during non-commute hours. SAIS is Hopkin's graduate school for international relations, is among the best along with Georgetown's and Harvard's, but it's based in DC - an hour drive minimum during non-commute hours. With the APL, perhaps Hopkins undergrads get some benefit with the few professors that teach in both locations, but the greatest benefit of top professors is working directly in their research labs. With SAIS, the top professors all live in DC and do not professors care much about teaching undergrads in a city an hour away.
The campus is mediocre with a very cramped quad. The architecture is mediocre.
The city is the worst out of all the top universities. Not because it's boring, but because it's outright dangerous and rundown. There's relatively safe development near the harbor, but it is a small area and everywhere else is terrible. What could be amazing night-outs turn out to be outright dangerous.
The lack of Division 1 sports and terrible Greek Life is an advantage as far as I'm concerned. Baltimore has major sports teams with the Orioles and the Ravens. Greeks are about 30% of the population which is the threshold where they dominate the campus culture, which is unfortunate.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You guys are idiots. It’s also top ranked in public policy, economics, etc. It’s hospital and medical research are world renowned, but it’s global policy program is renowned world wide too.
What ranking are you using? The public affairs school is ranked 35, same as UMD. Its Economics program is ranked 22, same as UMD.
https://www.usnews.com/best-graduate-schools/top-public-affairs-schools/public-affairs-rankings?_sort=rank-asc
https://www.usnews.com/best-graduate-schools/top-humanities-schools/economics-rankings?_sort=rank-asc
It's ranked 4 for Global Policy and Administration Programs, but that is for the graduate school SAIS which is based in DC, 1 hour away during off-peak hours by car. SAIS professors live in DC so the undergrads in Baltimore get little to no benefit from the graduate school.
Actually some SAIS professors teach at the undergrad campus and the 5 year ba/ma program is popular. Hopkins also has campuses in Bologna and Beijing.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It’s a great school, but in a terrible location. DC took a tour and crossed it off the list based on surrounding area
Yale, Columbia, and Chicago have done just fine with their locations in the not-so-distant past. Hopefully that portion of Baltimore will continue to improve.
Hopkins also has the benefit of the name recognition that its med school and hospital provide. It was a popular school for kids in Mountain View and Palo Alto, CA to look at when I was out there.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You guys are idiots. It’s also top ranked in public policy, economics, etc. It’s hospital and medical research are world renowned, but it’s global policy program is renowned world wide too.
What ranking are you using? The public affairs school is ranked 35, same as UMD. Its Economics program is ranked 22, same as UMD.
https://www.usnews.com/best-graduate-schools/top-public-affairs-schools/public-affairs-rankings?_sort=rank-asc
https://www.usnews.com/best-graduate-schools/top-humanities-schools/economics-rankings?_sort=rank-asc
It's ranked 4 for Global Policy and Administration Programs, but that is for the graduate school SAIS which is based in DC, 1 hour away during off-peak hours by car. SAIS professors live in DC so the undergrads in Baltimore get little to no benefit from the graduate school.