Anonymous wrote:We know this isn’t true. Look at the Harvard and UNC lawsuits. Look at TJ’s new admissions standards. Look at the criminal spotlight on rich people buying their kids spots at schools. If it was purely based on a kid being a better student, first generation, minorities, legacies, sports, etc. wouldn’t matter. They do and it means often the smartest kids are excluded somewhere because another student with non academic pros beats him out.
Anonymous wrote:Well better colleges used to have better students. Now I don’t believe it any more. Too many athletes, legacy, and social projects at top colleges. I have confidence only in a few colleges like MIT like Carnegie Mellon.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Many drop out because they run out if money. Are people with more money better than poor people?
I think it is a little more complicated than your offensive take on things.
I was a dorm RA at a state school. Students on full means based scholarships failed out every semester. Kids literally paid to go to college. They were just flat out dumb and lazy. They likely tested at an elementary or middle school capacity.
Anonymous wrote:Many drop out because they run out if money. Are people with more money better than poor people?
I think it is a little more complicated than your offensive take on things.
Anonymous wrote:Well better colleges used to have better students. Now I don’t believe it any more. Too many athletes, legacy, and social projects at top colleges. I have confidence only in a few colleges like MIT like Carnegie Mellon.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Here are the 50 smartest colleges in America
based on test scores before the pandemic when test score was mandatory.
https://www.businessinsider.com/the-50-smartest-colleges-in-america-2016-10
Franklin W. Olin College of Engineering?
Most people on DCUM never heard of MIT, either- before having access to the internet.
OP I find you posts consistently divisive, intentionally misleading, and quite rude.
You obviously have quite a large chip on your shoulder.
If you have so many issues with “better schools”, consider (more/different) therapy.
Anonymous wrote:Okay but why should I, as an employer, GAF who is the best student? I don’t have any jobs for studying and taking tests. I need to know who is the best project manager and best salesperson and best communicator. Mind you, I do think student quality has some overlap with the skills I’m looking for, but you’re the one talking about the “best students.”
I find the obsession over where a person spends 4 years of their life really odd. Especially in the DMV, people seem to take more about predictors of success than actual… success.
And before you accuse me of being a naive populist, I went to Northwestern.
Anonymous wrote:Well better colleges used to have better students. Now I don’t believe it any more. Too many athletes, legacy, and social projects at top colleges. I have confidence only in a few colleges like MIT like Carnegie Mellon.
Anonymous wrote:Before you accuse me of being a snob or an elitist, I will start by saying that I went to a pretty bad college; one that accepts students with C minus averages and whose 4-year-graduation rate is less than 20 percent. The first piece of evidence that students at worse colleges are generally worse students is the obvious fact that we got into colleges like this in the first place. In my case, you don't even need to look at where I went to college in order to know that I was a bad student in high school; just the fact that I graduated with a B average and 6 AP credits is proof enough.
The next piece of evidence that students at worse colleges are generally worse students is the fact that the 4-year-graduate rates at these colleges are much lower. This seems like it should also be pretty self-explanatory, in that they failed to graduate in 4 years for the same reason they couldn't get into a better college. Notice that I've switched the tense to "third-person" because this doesn't apply to me; I was in the <20 percent of students who graduated in 4 years. And yet, I constantly hear excuses made for these students, namely that they have to work. Well, I had a job in college even though I didn't have to, and I still graduated on time. Also, I visited the campus of a top-ranked college with a >99% graduation rate, and saw that there was a tutoring center there where students could work and tutor other students, which means that there are plenty of students at the college who also work and graduate on time.
Also, it's much easier to graduate from these worse colleges in 4 years or less because they take all your AP credits. So the fact that students who go to worse colleges generally have a harder time graduating in 4 years even though the road to graduating on time is easier at said colleges really proves that they are worse students.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Here are the 50 smartest colleges in America
based on test scores before the pandemic when test score was mandatory.
https://www.businessinsider.com/the-50-smartest-colleges-in-america-2016-10
Franklin W. Olin College of Engineering?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Here are the 50 smartest colleges in America
based on test scores before the pandemic when test score was mandatory.
https://www.businessinsider.com/the-50-smartest-colleges-in-america-2016-10
Franklin W. Olin College of Engineering?
Anonymous wrote:If you believe that all institutions are interchangeable and one has nothing to offer over the other, I am not sure that you have access to really high quality opportunities. All schools are actually not created equal. A student can try make the most out of any college but they are not all the same by any means