Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Interestingly, of the three lists (Best Classroom Experience, Best Undergrad Teaching [R1], Best Undergrad Teaching [LAC]), these are the five schools that show up twice:
Grinnell
Reed
St. John's (MD)
St. Olaf
Wellesley
For Princeton Review, the student survey lists are in the public section. Their actual ratings are a bit different, and use both surveys and additional info, but are in the passwd protected section. They also have written descriptions there for each school, similar to Fiske. The good news is the passwd section is free. We found it one of the most useful references.
Anonymous wrote:A list from a college counselor survey:
https://www.collegexpress.com/lists/list/the-experts-choice-the-best-undergraduate-education/658/
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Interestingly, of the three lists (Best Classroom Experience, Best Undergrad Teaching [R1], Best Undergrad Teaching [LAC]), these are the five schools that show up twice:
Grinnell
Reed
St. John's (MD)
St. Olaf
Wellesley
Why do I get the impression their idea of a great professor is a snarky little socialist with a man bun who thinks it’s cool to bash the US & drop a few F-bombs in class?
Because you are clueless?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Interestingly, of the three lists (Best Classroom Experience, Best Undergrad Teaching [R1], Best Undergrad Teaching [LAC]), these are the five schools that show up twice:
Grinnell
Reed
St. John's (MD)
St. Olaf
Wellesley
Why do I get the impression their idea of a great professor is a snarky little socialist with a man bun who thinks it’s cool to bash the US & drop a few F-bombs in class?
Anonymous wrote:Interestingly, of the three lists (Best Classroom Experience, Best Undergrad Teaching [R1], Best Undergrad Teaching [LAC]), these are the five schools that show up twice:
Grinnell
Reed
St. John's (MD)
St. Olaf
Wellesley
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:There’s teaching quality but I’m most interested in learning quality. Some public colleges insist that students seek out the resources needed. Classroom interaction is not as important when lectures are recorded while attendance at office hours and labs is critical for success.
So, paying $80k+ for office hours? Don't "tutors" cost a lot less than attending $80k+ school?