Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:As an offshoot, will regional state schools become more desirable for students hoping to catch a good value / name recognition, lightning in a bottle situation?
That is, will University of Northern Colorado, SUNY - Binghamton, and University of Southern Maine all become hot choices as we all look to get the most bang from the buck?
Yes. People are less impressed with a name brand education now and more impressed with the value. If these schools provide a solid education that can get you to land a first job then the students are on their way. Nobody really believes only the top 30 colleges that are so hard to get into and are so expensive are the only way to a successful career.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I think the next "hot" college is not a college but a different trend for society to obsess over and feel they need the "best" to be the "best". I think people are so sick of USNWR rankings and obsessing over colleges. Soon no one will care what college you went to at all. It is making high school students and their parents crazy and people are overspending on certain colleges. There will be something else in life to rank themselves against everyone else with. In the past few decades it has been colleges, houses, neighborhoods, kitchens and bathrooms. Pick the next trend for people to get worked up about trying to seek some sort of perfection.
Rich people problems. Seriously?
It is not just rich people. The middle class is driving themselves into debt trying to keep up with what is perceived as the good life.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Claremont Colleges
Already hot. 4 of 5 "Cs" are the most selective SLACs in the country. Harder to get into than Williams, for example.
Anonymous wrote:Elon, Carlton, and a whole bunch of Southern schools (Alabama, Sewanee, etc...) Rich kids are getting shut out of the top tier schools and attending (and thus increasing the prestige of) lower tier schools.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I think the next "hot" college is not a college but a different trend for society to obsess over and feel they need the "best" to be the "best". I think people are so sick of USNWR rankings and obsessing over colleges. Soon no one will care what college you went to at all. It is making high school students and their parents crazy and people are overspending on certain colleges. There will be something else in life to rank themselves against everyone else with. In the past few decades it has been colleges, houses, neighborhoods, kitchens and bathrooms. Pick the next trend for people to get worked up about trying to seek some sort of perfection.
Rich people problems. Seriously?
Anonymous wrote:I think the next "hot" college is not a college but a different trend for society to obsess over and feel they need the "best" to be the "best". I think people are so sick of USNWR rankings and obsessing over colleges. Soon no one will care what college you went to at all. It is making high school students and their parents crazy and people are overspending on certain colleges. There will be something else in life to rank themselves against everyone else with. In the past few decades it has been colleges, houses, neighborhoods, kitchens and bathrooms. Pick the next trend for people to get worked up about trying to seek some sort of perfection.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Reed is too focused on academia to ever become a hot college. It doesn't even have a real computer science department (too preprofessional for them), and forget engineering. It will always attract people who want academia but will never become wildly popular.
Reed is actually adding a computer science major. But it will still be extremely theoretical and taught by faculty in the mathematics department.
That's pretty useless. What are they supposed to do? Take their coding classes at community college over the summer? It would be more useful.
Anonymous wrote:Reed is too focused on academia to ever become a hot college. It doesn't even have a real computer science department (too preprofessional for them), and forget engineering. It will always attract people who want academia but will never become wildly popular.
Reed is actually adding a computer science major. But it will still be extremely theoretical and taught by faculty in the mathematics department.
Anonymous wrote:Bard
Carlton
Earlham
Grinnell
Lawrence
Anonymous wrote:Elon, Carlton, and a whole bunch of Southern schools (Alabama, Sewanee, etc...) Rich kids are getting shut out of the top tier schools and attending (and thus increasing the prestige of) lower tier schools.