Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:U of Chicago.
Maybe these days. Twenty years ago when I was living in Canada for a summer, the Canadian professionals I was hanging out with complained that Americans did not know of Canada's good universities (McGill, but also Toronto and Queens). At the time, I was a graduate student at Chicago but none of them viewed that as prestigious. I thought that was kind of funny.
Anonymous wrote:who cares?
Anonymous wrote:Abroad, it would be Harvard,Stanford, MIT, Berkeley, Caltech.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Most foreigners are not familiar with Yale or Princeton or view them more prestigious than MIT, Berkeley or Stanford if they have heard of them.
Meant "Most foreigners are not too familiar with Yale or Princeton and do not view them more prestigious than MIT, Berkeley or Stanford even if they heard of Yale or Princeton."
Anonymous wrote:Most foreigners are not familiar with Yale or Princeton or view them more prestigious than MIT, Berkeley or Stanford if they have heard of them.
Anonymous wrote:Most foreigners are not familiar with Yale or Princeton or view them more prestigious than MIT, Berkeley or Stanford if they have heard of them.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Columbia, Cornell, Johns Hopkins, Chicago, Stanford, MIT
This plus Dartmouth, Brown, UPenn, Duke, CalTech, Georgetown (foreign service school).
Also, Williams, Amherst, Swathmore, Bryn Mawr, Wellesley.
I'm S.Korean and most S. Koreans are well aware of U.S. College rankings more than most Americans.
Most of my friends in Lat Am and Europe have never even heard of those. At the top of prestige, they'd probably say Harvard, Stanford, Berkeley, perhaps MIT. Everything else is a step below.
Including Yale and Princeton?
Anonymous wrote:U of Chicago.