Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Williams doesn't make the list... Surprisingly.
If you're figuring in CEOs (of which there are a lot more than Nobel prize winners and the like so it likely heavily tilts towards these kinds of thing), schools that don't have a business aim aren't going to have as many "leaders."
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This index is too "corporate and business oriented" (politicians and CEOs--why are they the bastion of leadership??). And how many people win nobel prizes each year--a tiny number: these are too esoteric to be useful as an indicator of "leadership". They need to include thought leaders in public policy, health, media, law, academia, literature, arts, and so on.
I agree.
Anonymous wrote:This index is too "corporate and business oriented" (politicians and CEOs--why are they the bastion of leadership??). And how many people win nobel prizes each year--a tiny number: these are too esoteric to be useful as an indicator of "leadership". They need to include thought leaders in public policy, health, media, law, academia, literature, arts, and so on.
Anonymous wrote:This index is too "corporate and business oriented" (politicians and CEOs--why are they the bastion of leadership??). And how many people win nobel prizes each year--a tiny number: these are too esoteric to be useful as an indicator of "leadership". They need to include thought leaders in public policy, health, media, law, academia, literature, arts, and so on.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What is Rice good at?
Engineering and educating rich Texans who then go on to stay rich Texans
Anonymous wrote:Williams doesn't make the list... Surprisingly.
Anonymous wrote:JMU isn't on the list? Shocking...
Anonymous wrote:Just another listing where Michigan is in the top ten. The listing is weighted for school size. Very impressive!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Others on the list ...
UCLA- 33
JHU-39
WashU-37
CMU-32
Tufts-66
Tulane-67
Georgia Tech- 73
Caltech-75
Rice-90
Amherst-92
Why these extra schools to show? Are you skipping the ones you think are less selective/prestigious? The reason I raise is that the ones you skip are great options for those who may not have the most perfect HS resume but still have a bright future ahead of them. Miami University (35), Iowa State (38), Syracuse (43), University of Alabama (45), LSU (58)....