Anonymous wrote:It doesn’t really compare to any other school because it’s so tiny. It’s much smaller than most high schools and you have to want that environment. Obviously the trade off is access and attention. But daughter’s best friend is finishing her first year there and climbing the walls…
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Caltech is the only school environment I can easily declare is completely miserable. There’s nothing fun going on at Caltech. It’s just an environment for people obsessed with STEM. Best for the introverted science kid who wants to go to aspires most to get a PhD/be a leader in STEM.
Based on your extensive time perusing DCUM?
Anonymous wrote:Caltech is the only school environment I can easily declare is completely miserable. There’s nothing fun going on at Caltech. It’s just an environment for people obsessed with STEM. Best for the introverted science kid who wants to go to aspires most to get a PhD/be a leader in STEM.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:https://www.its.caltech.edu/~ph1a/QPs/QP1-53.pdfAnonymous wrote:CalTech is pass fail for first 2 years, no? How can that be soul crushing?
These are the quiz problems for first quarter physics.
There are 54 pages - so about 5-6 pages per week? It took me a week for one page at the GMU level and people thought I was smart. I didn't take AP Physics though - I was a HS Senior taking CS classes. The Caltech people did and this is likely a rigorous review.
I think it's doable for any Physics major if given enough time - the hard part is time. But then I also heard that these are solved with groups of smart people. I remember reading that you try it alone and you will fail;
Op - can you post a sample project/quiz for a CS course? I can compare apples to apples.
HW for automata course: https://courses.cms.caltech.edu/cs20/a/assign.html
Labs (HW?) for the lowest level of CS available: https://courses.cms.caltech.edu/cs1/assignments/lab1/ (increment the 1 and the end)
Exam to place out of CS 1: https://courses.cms.caltech.edu/cs1/placement/placement-exam-cs1.html
2nd term CS (which some students place into): https://debuggi.ng/26wi/ (note the lecture timings, seen more easily by turning the calendar to list mode)
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:https://www.its.caltech.edu/~ph1a/QPs/QP1-53.pdfAnonymous wrote:CalTech is pass fail for first 2 years, no? How can that be soul crushing?
These are the quiz problems for first quarter physics.
There are 54 pages - so about 5-6 pages per week? It took me a week for one page at the GMU level and people thought I was smart. I didn't take AP Physics though - I was a HS Senior taking CS classes. The Caltech people did and this is likely a rigorous review.
I think it's doable for any Physics major if given enough time - the hard part is time. But then I also heard that these are solved with groups of smart people. I remember reading that you try it alone and you will fail;
Op - can you post a sample project/quiz for a CS course? I can compare apples to apples.
HW for automata course: https://courses.cms.caltech.edu/cs20/a/assign.html
Labs (HW?) for the lowest level of CS available: https://courses.cms.caltech.edu/cs1/assignments/lab1/ (increment the 1 and the end)
Exam to place out of CS 1: https://courses.cms.caltech.edu/cs1/placement/placement-exam-cs1.html
2nd term CS (which some students place into): https://debuggi.ng/26wi/ (note the lecture timings, seen more easily by turning the calendar to list mode)
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:https://www.its.caltech.edu/~ph1a/QPs/QP1-53.pdfAnonymous wrote:CalTech is pass fail for first 2 years, no? How can that be soul crushing?
These are the quiz problems for first quarter physics.
There are 54 pages - so about 5-6 pages per week? It took me a week for one page at the GMU level and people thought I was smart. I didn't take AP Physics though - I was a HS Senior taking CS classes. The Caltech people did and this is likely a rigorous review.
I think it's doable for any Physics major if given enough time - the hard part is time. But then I also heard that these are solved with groups of smart people. I remember reading that you try it alone and you will fail;
Op - can you post a sample project/quiz for a CS course? I can compare apples to apples.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Caltech is vastly vastly superior to Harvey mudd. only 35 students in Harvey Mudd's entire freshman class scored above 1560 on the sat. at Caltech, that number is closer to 80 percent of the class.
Harvey Mudd is test optional.
Caltech isn't.
Where is that 35 students figure coming from?
Harvey Mudd's Common Data Set
Freshman class size: 236
130 enrolled freshman submitted SAT's
25%-50%-75%
1500-1510-1560
75 percent of freshman scored BELOW 1560, 25 percent above. 25% of 130 about 30 students. In fact, something like 40% scored below 1500 at Harvey Mudd when you realize only half bother to submit an SAT score. These are usually the below the 25th percentile crowd.
So, no, Caltech and Harvey Mudd are vastly different in the quality of their undergraduate students
Yet their outcomes for salaries and PhD production are essentially indistinguishable![]()
Anonymous wrote:https://www.its.caltech.edu/~ph1a/QPs/QP1-53.pdfAnonymous wrote:CalTech is pass fail for first 2 years, no? How can that be soul crushing?
These are the quiz problems for first quarter physics.