Anonymous wrote:I don't believe employers read them. I think they may have their own rankings, which may be similar, but I don't believe they actually consult US News.
Anonymous wrote:Can't we all just agree that the US news rankings are flawed but also influential and leave it at that?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I know elite law firms typically restrict their recruiting to "top 20" schools. There might be 25 or so schools that can claim top 20 status, but other than those schools, forget about it.
Thats law schools, not undergrad. And because the field is a smaller universe you don't need outside rankings to know which schools they refer to.
And I actually think this is not the case. A student who does well at a state law school and gets a competitive clerkship would probably be very attractive to these firms.
Anonymous wrote:There are very few schools that are universally recognized as elite. Rankings help separate Washington University from the University of Washington and provide insight into why Wisconsin is a better school than Indiana or Ohio State.
The rankings are best used as a starting point for sifting through the hundreds of options out there. No one has personal knowledge of every school ranked by USNews.
Anonymous wrote:The reason the US News rankings gained such traction is that they are generally consistent with what most people think based on what they know - so they assume they are accurate in other respects. So, for example, when I see the comparative rankings of Princeton, Duke, Georgetown and UVA, I say "that seems about right" and I trust the other rankings.
The methodology is subject to question, but the results seem right.
Anonymous wrote:I know elite law firms typically restrict their recruiting to "top 20" schools. There might be 25 or so schools that can claim top 20 status, but other than those schools, forget about it.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
Read "The Overachievers" -- there is a great amount of reporting on how corrupt & flawed USNWR actually is.
It doesn't change the fact that rankings -- these rankings, in particular -- matter, and that graduate programs and employers are influenced by them. I've made this point on other threads before, but it bears making again -- if it didn't matter, kids wouldn't be applying in droves to these schools and acceptance rates wouldn't be sub-10%. Think about how insane that is; while some of you are crowing about how you care nothing about the eliteness of a school, all of your kids (or everyone else's kids) are applying. So these schools are clearly not suffering from whatever grand delusions you think they have, or US News perpetuates.
Anonymous wrote:
Read "The Overachievers" -- there is a great amount of reporting on how corrupt & flawed USNWR actually is.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Serously doubt you went to Princeton OP. If you did, you wouldn't dispute rankings. You'd applaud them.
OP again. Yes I went to Princeton, before anyone even talking about rankings. I'm not sure they existed in the early 80s. I didn't care about Harvard or Yale or whatever and i certainly don't get my self-esteem from US News.
I am going through the process now with a DC who is curious, has intellectual passions, and is very self-motivated. He could care less about what some corporation thinks about colleges, he's going to decide for himself. This isn't a game where you are trying to "win" by getting the highest number of points (or rank). Its my DC's future. I've glad he's thinking for himself.
And I certainly don't applaud rankings as they corrupt the process. Did you know that at Wash. U in St/ Louis they have students taking tours fill out a "preliminary application" so that they can inflate their application numbers? And how about the way some schools offer January admissions? This didn't use to happen as much and they do it so those applicants scores don't have to go in the database for rankings.