Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It's interesting--this is a case where another public school (University of Pittsburgh) than the flagship (Penn State) has higher academics -- Pitt's average SAT is about 100 points higher than PSU and has much higher average GPA. I wonder how much this shift is happening with kids going to stronger academic hs in metro areas wanting to stay in metro areas (where jobs, internships and broader cultural activities are) rather than where the traditional land grant flagships are in more isolated locations/college towns?
Pitt: 1280-1420 middle 50%
PSU: 1250-1450 middle 50%
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It's interesting--this is a case where another public school (University of Pittsburgh) than the flagship (Penn State) has higher academics -- Pitt's average SAT is about 100 points higher than PSU and has much higher average GPA. I wonder how much this shift is happening with kids going to stronger academic hs in metro areas wanting to stay in metro areas (where jobs, internships and broader cultural activities are) rather than where the traditional land grant flagships are in more isolated locations/college towns?
Pitt: 1280-1420 middle 50%
PSU: 1250-1450 middle 50%
Anonymous wrote:What’s the warped view?
We’ve noticed more and more kids interested in U of A, likely because of their transparent approach to financial aid. Consult the table for your GPA and standardized test score and there’s your aid package. Refreshingly straightforward. My daughter applied and sure enough the FA offering matched the table. What a concept!
Anonymous wrote:It's interesting--this is a case where another public school (University of Pittsburgh) than the flagship (Penn State) has higher academics -- Pitt's average SAT is about 100 points higher than PSU and has much higher average GPA. I wonder how much this shift is happening with kids going to stronger academic hs in metro areas wanting to stay in metro areas (where jobs, internships and broader cultural activities are) rather than where the traditional land grant flagships are in more isolated locations/college towns?
Anonymous wrote:It's interesting--this is a case where another public school (University of Pittsburgh) than the flagship (Penn State) has higher academics -- Pitt's average SAT is about 100 points higher than PSU and has much higher average GPA. I wonder how much this shift is happening with kids going to stronger academic hs in metro areas wanting to stay in metro areas (where jobs, internships and broader cultural activities are) rather than where the traditional land grant flagships are in more isolated locations/college towns?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The top state school in Pennsylvania that I can think of is Penn State. Is this the highest ranking public in PA?
Flagship isn't the same as highest ranking. Often, that's true, but not always.
Penn State is definitely Pennsylvania's flagship.
Right. Like Georgia, for example? GT is higher ranked than UGA, but UGA is the flagship.
What about states like Arizona- is the flagship ASU or U of A? How about New York? Does it even have a flagship? Indiana University vs. Purdue?
University of Arizona.
But Arizona State is better in almost all majors and as a whole.
What? Not in any field I'm acquainted with.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The top state school in Pennsylvania that I can think of is Penn State. Is this the highest ranking public in PA?
Flagship isn't the same as highest ranking. Often, that's true, but not always.
Penn State is definitely Pennsylvania's flagship.
Right. Like Georgia, for example? GT is higher ranked than UGA, but UGA is the flagship.
What about states like Arizona- is the flagship ASU or U of A? How about New York? Does it even have a flagship? Indiana University vs. Purdue?
University of Arizona.
But Arizona State is better in almost all majors and as a whole.
Anonymous wrote:What was the thinking in NY?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Pitt, PSU and Temple are all considered the Tier 1 public schools in Pennsylvania. There are a number of others that are considered Tier 2 like Slippery Rock, IUP, Bloomsburg to name a few.
The ranking of the school has nothing to do with which school is the flagship. Penn State is most definitely the Pennsylvania state flagship school. Pitt and Temple are both funded differently so neither of them are the flagship. And as with any battle group, there can only be one flagship.
You get it’s not really a ship, right?