Anonymous wrote:No Cornell supporters out there noting that this combined ranking puts it above Brown? Too many people think Cornell is the "worst of the best" just because of USNWR.
Anonymous wrote:This is great, thank you for sharing OP. I was always confused how Emory ranks so high in US News so this provides some helpful context. A little surprised by how much Brown tumbled, but honestly I can't think of a single department where Brown is a true leader/at the top of the heap. It might just have a ton of help from its ivy league branding?
Anonymous wrote:Just ask your self if you were admitted to both Duke and Harvard, which one would you pick regardless of major? Is there really any exception in the answer? That tells you this ranking is worthless.
Anonymous wrote:Saw this and thought it was interesting. Basically someone took the average ranking of each college from these sources and created a composite rank for each school relative to all the other schools. It was noted schools like Georgetown and Duke were underranked by US News and schools like UChicago and JHU were overranked. Some of these rankings included focus more on academics and some more on ROI, so with a composite I believe the idea was to see which schools excel in all the important metrics for undergrad.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Saw this and thought it was interesting. Basically someone took the average ranking of each college from these sources and created a composite rank for each school relative to all the other schools. It was noted schools like Georgetown and Duke were underranked by US News and schools like UChicago and JHU were overranked. Some of these rankings included focus more on academics and some more on ROI, so with a composite I believe the idea was to see which schools excel in all the important metrics for undergrad.
I think Rice will go down in these rankings solely due to location. I know at least a few very bright kids who didn’t apply to Rice this year because it’s in Texas and they’re worried about policy down there.
Maybe, but I doubt it. It's not like those kids would have considered Rice/Texas in the past, if they don't like Texas now they most likely wouldn't have liked it then. Rice has its own very strong base of feeder schools and top students from the South so they'll be more than fine.
+1 Rice is extremely desirable for a lot of students. IMO it's like the Dartmouth of the south -- heavy undergrad focus, great academics, small student body. Main difference is that it's in a vibrant city while Dartmouth is in the middle of nowhere
Rice and UT basically run oil and gas in Texas. Not everyone's cup of tea, but can't deny that it's lucrative
Anonymous wrote:Makes sense that Stanford and MIT are at the top - they've been leading the tech revolution in higher education. CMU and Berkeley should be higher though as they're right up there too, and they have great departments in the humanities as well, so they're not one-trick ponies.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Saw this and thought it was interesting. Basically someone took the average ranking of each college from these sources and created a composite rank for each school relative to all the other schools. It was noted schools like Georgetown and Duke were underranked by US News and schools like UChicago and JHU were overranked. Some of these rankings included focus more on academics and some more on ROI, so with a composite I believe the idea was to see which schools excel in all the important metrics for undergrad.
I think Rice will go down in these rankings solely due to location. I know at least a few very bright kids who didn’t apply to Rice this year because it’s in Texas and they’re worried about policy down there.
Maybe, but I doubt it. It's not like those kids would have considered Rice/Texas in the past, if they don't like Texas now they most likely wouldn't have liked it then. Rice has its own very strong base of feeder schools and top students from the South so they'll be more than fine.
+1 Rice is extremely desirable for a lot of students. IMO it's like the Dartmouth of the south -- heavy undergrad focus, great academics, small student body. Main difference is that it's in a vibrant city while Dartmouth is in the middle of nowhere
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Saw this and thought it was interesting. Basically someone took the average ranking of each college from these sources and created a composite rank for each school relative to all the other schools. It was noted schools like Georgetown and Duke were underranked by US News and schools like UChicago and JHU were overranked. Some of these rankings included focus more on academics and some more on ROI, so with a composite I believe the idea was to see which schools excel in all the important metrics for undergrad.
I think Rice will go down in these rankings solely due to location. I know at least a few very bright kids who didn’t apply to Rice this year because it’s in Texas and they’re worried about policy down there.
Maybe, but I doubt it. It's not like those kids would have considered Rice/Texas in the past, if they don't like Texas now they most likely wouldn't have liked it then. Rice has its own very strong base of feeder schools and top students from the South so they'll be more than fine.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Saw this and thought it was interesting. Basically someone took the average ranking of each college from these sources and created a composite rank for each school relative to all the other schools. It was noted schools like Georgetown and Duke were underranked by US News and schools like UChicago and JHU were overranked. Some of these rankings included focus more on academics and some more on ROI, so with a composite I believe the idea was to see which schools excel in all the important metrics for undergrad.
I think Rice will go down in these rankings solely due to location. I know at least a few very bright kids who didn’t apply to Rice this year because it’s in Texas and they’re worried about policy down there.
Anonymous wrote:Saw this and thought it was interesting. Basically someone took the average ranking of each college from these sources and created a composite rank for each school relative to all the other schools. It was noted schools like Georgetown and Duke were underranked by US News and schools like UChicago and JHU were overranked. Some of these rankings included focus more on academics and some more on ROI, so with a composite I believe the idea was to see which schools excel in all the important metrics for undergrad.
Anonymous wrote:This was already talked about last fall. The poster is not giving credit to the Reddit user who created the list.
https://www.reddit.com/r/ApplyingToCollege/comments/xc0v5x/the_2023_supreme_t75_college_ranking_aggregating/