Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Oh wait, when did Columbia get hot?
Maybe when they won a football game?![]()
My kid is very smart, but I doubt he's driven enough to get into an Ivy. On the other hand, if he did, I am having trouble imagining the circumstances under which I'd recommend Columbia over Brown.
Probably doesn't matter what you'd recommend -- your 18 y.o. will and should choose what s/he wants and needs because s/he's going there, not you. I, too, would have recommended Brown over Columbia, but my kids didn't see it that way. They wanted a big city, the core curriculum. and not so many preppies (even of the boho-chic variety). Turns out they're happy and thriving, so I have no complaints.
Anonymous wrote:University of Chicago (not an Ivy, but ranked 10) was certainly poo poo'd by my big 3.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Oh wait, when did Columbia get hot?
Maybe when they won a football game?![]()
My kid is very smart, but I doubt he's driven enough to get into an Ivy. On the other hand, if he did, I am having trouble imagining the circumstances under which I'd recommend Columbia over Brown.
Anonymous wrote:Based on Anonymous's observation that SAT/ ACT scores of admitted students are
the truest measure, then Tufts EASILY tops several schools ranked higher than it
on USNWR (Emory, Wake, UVA, USC, UCLA, CMU, Berkeley, G'town) and roughly
equals or arguably tops others (JHU, N'western, Vandy, UND, AND the much-maligned Cornell).
Anonymous wrote:Cornell has higher admission rates because some parts of it are state schools (land grant) and those parts have to give preference and lower standards to New Yorkers. If you look at the parts that are NOT state schools (like the School of Arts & Sciences) its acceptances are like Penn and Columbia, Also, Cornell is larger in total number of students.
The land grant colleges actually, in my mind, make Cornell a better, more desirable school because it has a long history (compared to the other Ivies) of welcoming women and offering many different types of majors. This makes it less snotty and, to me , that's a good thing.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I am not sure what you are asking OP. Do you want to know about kids who applied to Ivys and did not get in?
The only thing I want to know about Ivies is why some idiot(s) insist on clarifying that the Ivies they attended/sent kids to/rejected are "top".
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I am not sure what you are asking OP. Do you want to know about kids who applied to Ivys and did not get in?
The only thing I want to know about Ivies is why some idiot(s) insist on clarifying that the Ivies they attended/sent kids to/rejected are "top".
Anonymous wrote:I am not sure what you are asking OP. Do you want to know about kids who applied to Ivys and did not get in?
Anonymous wrote:I'm gonna chime in here as a voice of reason and suggest that anyone who feels compelled to match these schools against each other just to flesh out which one is on top and which ones are on the bottom, is both obnoxious and has a fuzzy understanding of what's really important.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The "top" Ivies are HYP, and I would say if there are a "bottom three" they would be Cornell, Dartmouth, and Brown.
+1
Darmouth below Penn - REALLY? Why?