Anonymous wrote:NYU. Sounds very prestigious, but is really not extremely selective. Also GWU, American, Boston U, Boston College.
Large private schools in Boston, NY, DC will always have an overvalued reputation, because the I-95 corridor is where the dominant players in media/gov't/finance can be found, and a lot of their alumni will be found in those industries.
Meanwhile schools that are more selective than these (Rice, Vandy, Duke, Wash U, Emory) will seem less prestigious than they really are, because they are in flyover country/deep south.
Anonymous wrote:University of Michigan, from out of state (50% or ballpark admission rate).
Anonymous wrote:
I think that flagships have an advantage over other schools in terms of reputation. For example, I know exactly zero people who have gone to University of Wyoming, or a bunch of other flagships, but when I see a resume with a name like that I've got something to go on, and my mind goes to my stereotype of state flagships as solid places with a wide variety of majors, and some very bright kids who made sensible cost effective choices.
Anonymous wrote:Agree with an earlier poster who said southeren schools even when pretty darn good (like Vandy, and Duke) really don't "show well" outside of the south. And, yes folks, DC is in the south...so don't argue about how great people in DC think they are.
Anonymous wrote:NYU. Sounds very prestigious, but is really not extremely selective. Also GWU, American, Boston U, Boston College.
Large private schools in Boston, NY, DC will always have an overvalued reputation, because the I-95 corridor is where the dominant players in media/gov't/finance can be found, and a lot of their alumni will be found in those industries.
Meanwhile schools that are more selective than these (Rice, Vandy, Duke, Wash U, Emory) will seem less prestigious than they really are, because they are in flyover country/deep south.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Penn State if you want to stay in the ny-wash corridor.
ridiculous recruiting and alum network from a sheer size perspective.
? ridiculously good or ridiculously bad?
Anonymous wrote:Get one of those college guide books that every book store sells about the top 300+ colleges. You can look at scores, grades etc. and then make a "guesstimate" about your child's likelihood of getting in.
I would say Ohio State, Miami of Ohio, Penn State, Villanova, Temple, Tulane, Clemson, Elon, Wake Forest and many others.
Anonymous wrote:I know at the outset that this is an impossible question to answer, as one would need to better know grades/scores, etc., and it's also so subjective. That said, please do take a stab at it. Assuming a strong student (but not top ten percenter in grades or SATs) and well rounded extracurriculars (but not a recruitable athlete or a phenom in any one thing), and no hooks, what are some of the "brand name" schools one might take a look at.