Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I’m just happy that people aren’t putting 3 at the top. There’s too many PhDs coming out of the Ivy league, let alone the rest of the T50, to even begin suggesting that there’s some extreme difference in education. Unless your kid is on the bounds and is highly highly intelligent (like top 0.001%) where they need specialized/accelerated instruction to the level of grad school near freshman year, you’re probably receiving a very similar education to others.
Purely anecdotal. Have your PhD friends published any literature about this topic?
No. Ask faculty who have taught at both. Look at course syllabi. We have multiple relatives who are phD and md-phd who are teaching at a wide range of places. The faculty themselves are not too different barring the very top schools who tend to hire from each other, but the student set is vastly different: they can detail how much they have to water down and slow the pace when they teach at (unnamed 40-something) vs ivy. All institutions put pressure on faculty to keep the average student receiving no lower than a B : they have to rework their courses from what they taught as T10 postdoc, or risk not advancing to tenure. Parents are highly involved and students can ruin a professor on ratings or complaints to the dept chair.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:https://math.cornell.edu/lower-level-courses (scroll to bottom)Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I’m just happy that people aren’t putting 3 at the top. There’s too many PhDs coming out of the Ivy league, let alone the rest of the T50, to even begin suggesting that there’s some extreme difference in education. Unless your kid is on the bounds and is highly highly intelligent (like top 0.001%) where they need specialized/accelerated instruction to the level of grad school near freshman year, you’re probably receiving a very similar education to others.
Even a standard freshman course like math 2230 at Cornell will exceed the level of rigor of any freshman math course at most lower ranked universities
Cite?
https://pi.math.cornell.edu/~allenk/courses/14/2230/
Compre this to the freshman math options at most other lower ranked schools (e.g. any VA school besides UVA)
Post the syllabus from a VA school to backup your claim.
DP. Very few schools are teaching a course like that.
Prove it
Have you taken vector calc? How did the material compare to the posted course?
Anonymous wrote:I’m just happy that people aren’t putting 3 at the top. There’s too many PhDs coming out of the Ivy league, let alone the rest of the T50, to even begin suggesting that there’s some extreme difference in education. Unless your kid is on the bounds and is highly highly intelligent (like top 0.001%) where they need specialized/accelerated instruction to the level of grad school near freshman year, you’re probably receiving a very similar education to others.
Anonymous wrote:Prestigious schools are more likely to give excellent need based aid, which is a priority for us.
Anonymous wrote:1) Status symbol that reflects intellect and ambition
2) Networking opportunities for graduate school, jobs, and more
3) Quality of education that includes instruction from noted academics
4) Recruiting opportunities, including Wall Street and high-end consulting companies
5) Family tradition to go to a particular school or type of school
6) Student quality, including smarts, wealth, celebrity, and more
Anonymous wrote:It's not unique, but it is uncommon, especially outside T50 schools. For example, there is no such course at any VA school besides UVA. Most schools only have the equivalent of Cornell's math 1920 (ordinary calc 3) or math 2220 (honors calc 3, with proofs), with nothing matching the math 2230/2240 sequence.Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:https://math.cornell.edu/lower-level-courses (scroll to bottom)Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I’m just happy that people aren’t putting 3 at the top. There’s too many PhDs coming out of the Ivy league, let alone the rest of the T50, to even begin suggesting that there’s some extreme difference in education. Unless your kid is on the bounds and is highly highly intelligent (like top 0.001%) where they need specialized/accelerated instruction to the level of grad school near freshman year, you’re probably receiving a very similar education to others.
Even a standard freshman course like math 2230 at Cornell will exceed the level of rigor of any freshman math course at most lower ranked universities
Cite?
https://pi.math.cornell.edu/~allenk/courses/14/2230/
Compre this to the freshman math options at most other lower ranked schools (e.g. any VA school besides UVA)
Post the syllabus from a VA school to backup your claim.
DP. Very few schools are teaching a course like that.
I'm lost. As someone with a math degree, many colleges teach vector calculus. This is just Calc 3 for math majors and is not at all unique to Cornell.
It's not unique, but it is uncommon, especially outside T50 schools. For example, there is no such course at any VA school besides UVA. Most schools only have the equivalent of Cornell's math 1920 (ordinary calc 3) or math 2220 (honors calc 3, with proofs), with nothing matching the math 2230/2240 sequence.Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:https://math.cornell.edu/lower-level-courses (scroll to bottom)Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I’m just happy that people aren’t putting 3 at the top. There’s too many PhDs coming out of the Ivy league, let alone the rest of the T50, to even begin suggesting that there’s some extreme difference in education. Unless your kid is on the bounds and is highly highly intelligent (like top 0.001%) where they need specialized/accelerated instruction to the level of grad school near freshman year, you’re probably receiving a very similar education to others.
Even a standard freshman course like math 2230 at Cornell will exceed the level of rigor of any freshman math course at most lower ranked universities
Cite?
https://pi.math.cornell.edu/~allenk/courses/14/2230/
Compre this to the freshman math options at most other lower ranked schools (e.g. any VA school besides UVA)
Post the syllabus from a VA school to backup your claim.
DP. Very few schools are teaching a course like that.
I'm lost. As someone with a math degree, many colleges teach vector calculus. This is just Calc 3 for math majors and is not at all unique to Cornell.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:https://math.cornell.edu/lower-level-courses (scroll to bottom)Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I’m just happy that people aren’t putting 3 at the top. There’s too many PhDs coming out of the Ivy league, let alone the rest of the T50, to even begin suggesting that there’s some extreme difference in education. Unless your kid is on the bounds and is highly highly intelligent (like top 0.001%) where they need specialized/accelerated instruction to the level of grad school near freshman year, you’re probably receiving a very similar education to others.
Even a standard freshman course like math 2230 at Cornell will exceed the level of rigor of any freshman math course at most lower ranked universities
Cite?
https://pi.math.cornell.edu/~allenk/courses/14/2230/
Compre this to the freshman math options at most other lower ranked schools (e.g. any VA school besides UVA)
Post the syllabus from a VA school to backup your claim.
DP. Very few schools are teaching a course like that.
Prove it
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:https://math.cornell.edu/lower-level-courses (scroll to bottom)Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I’m just happy that people aren’t putting 3 at the top. There’s too many PhDs coming out of the Ivy league, let alone the rest of the T50, to even begin suggesting that there’s some extreme difference in education. Unless your kid is on the bounds and is highly highly intelligent (like top 0.001%) where they need specialized/accelerated instruction to the level of grad school near freshman year, you’re probably receiving a very similar education to others.
Even a standard freshman course like math 2230 at Cornell will exceed the level of rigor of any freshman math course at most lower ranked universities
Cite?
https://pi.math.cornell.edu/~allenk/courses/14/2230/
Compre this to the freshman math options at most other lower ranked schools (e.g. any VA school besides UVA)
Post the syllabus from a VA school to backup your claim.
DP. Very few schools are teaching a course like that.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:https://math.cornell.edu/lower-level-courses (scroll to bottom)Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I’m just happy that people aren’t putting 3 at the top. There’s too many PhDs coming out of the Ivy league, let alone the rest of the T50, to even begin suggesting that there’s some extreme difference in education. Unless your kid is on the bounds and is highly highly intelligent (like top 0.001%) where they need specialized/accelerated instruction to the level of grad school near freshman year, you’re probably receiving a very similar education to others.
Even a standard freshman course like math 2230 at Cornell will exceed the level of rigor of any freshman math course at most lower ranked universities
Cite?
https://pi.math.cornell.edu/~allenk/courses/14/2230/
Compre this to the freshman math options at most other lower ranked schools (e.g. any VA school besides UVA)
Post the syllabus from a VA school to backup your claim.
DP. Very few schools are teaching a course like that.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:https://math.cornell.edu/lower-level-courses (scroll to bottom)Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I’m just happy that people aren’t putting 3 at the top. There’s too many PhDs coming out of the Ivy league, let alone the rest of the T50, to even begin suggesting that there’s some extreme difference in education. Unless your kid is on the bounds and is highly highly intelligent (like top 0.001%) where they need specialized/accelerated instruction to the level of grad school near freshman year, you’re probably receiving a very similar education to others.
Even a standard freshman course like math 2230 at Cornell will exceed the level of rigor of any freshman math course at most lower ranked universities
Cite?
https://pi.math.cornell.edu/~allenk/courses/14/2230/
Compre this to the freshman math options at most other lower ranked schools (e.g. any VA school besides UVA)
Post the syllabus from a VA school to backup your claim.
Anonymous wrote:https://math.cornell.edu/lower-level-courses (scroll to bottom)Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I’m just happy that people aren’t putting 3 at the top. There’s too many PhDs coming out of the Ivy league, let alone the rest of the T50, to even begin suggesting that there’s some extreme difference in education. Unless your kid is on the bounds and is highly highly intelligent (like top 0.001%) where they need specialized/accelerated instruction to the level of grad school near freshman year, you’re probably receiving a very similar education to others.
Even a standard freshman course like math 2230 at Cornell will exceed the level of rigor of any freshman math course at most lower ranked universities
Cite?
https://pi.math.cornell.edu/~allenk/courses/14/2230/
Compre this to the freshman math options at most other lower ranked schools (e.g. any VA school besides UVA)
https://math.cornell.edu/lower-level-courses (scroll to bottom)Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I’m just happy that people aren’t putting 3 at the top. There’s too many PhDs coming out of the Ivy league, let alone the rest of the T50, to even begin suggesting that there’s some extreme difference in education. Unless your kid is on the bounds and is highly highly intelligent (like top 0.001%) where they need specialized/accelerated instruction to the level of grad school near freshman year, you’re probably receiving a very similar education to others.
Even a standard freshman course like math 2230 at Cornell will exceed the level of rigor of any freshman math course at most lower ranked universities
Cite?