That's still ALL NY. So while very different and a bit diverse, the fact is majority of those students are from somewhere in NY and will want to remain in NY (somewhere) after graduation. Versus say attending UChicago or Northwestern: at Northwestern 78% of students are from out of state. So only 22% are from Chicago vs smaller cities near Chicago vs rural Illinois, vs medium cities elsewhere in IL. Much more diverse than where 85% are from NY state itself. Many kids want that from their college experience. And if you do a SUNY is not the place to get that
First, international students are excluded from both the numerator and the denominator when calculating OOS percentages at all universities. The 7% OOS figure is the one that allows for apples-to-apples comparisons with other schools' OOS figures (the SUNY schools don't get to puff their numbers, as you're trying to do, by including internationals when everyone else excludes them).
Second, your "collegefactual" cite is spouting nonsense. The CDS includes actual nonresident alien numbers, too, in section B2. At Bing, it's 575 out of 14,307, or 4%. (No rocket science required.)
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
I have always wondered about this too. They are a great value, even for out-of-state residents. Weather might be a factor, but plenty of people from the DMV choose SLACs and some out-of-state publics in cold climates.
But those schools generally have better academic reputations ... I mean you could equally ask why more DMV students aren't going to Penn State's regional campuses. The answer is because they don't want to and have better options.
The ignorance of some DCUM commenters -- and their insistence on advertising it -- is breathtaking.
On US News' list of National Universities, SUNY/Stony Brook ranks #77 (tie); SUNY/Binghamton ranks #83; and SUNY/Buffalo ranks #89 (tie).
That's equal to, or higher ranked than, several nearby OOS schools that get exhaustive interest and discussion on DCUM -- Penn State (#77- tie), Delaware (#89) or Temple (#121)
Those SUNY flagships are also higher ranked than several out of area OOS schools that frequently surface on DCUM -- Colorado/Boulder (#97), Arizona State (#121 - tie), and UVM (#121 - tie).
They're signficantly higher ranked than the southern universities and flagships that some trolls keep trying to push here -- Auburn (#97), South Carolina (#115), and Alabama (#137).
The SUNY flagships have stronger reputations than a lot of the schools that get talked up here on DCUM. That says a lot more about DCUM commenters, and their low information, and their priorities, than it does about the SUNY system.
Seems incredibly short-sighted of NY state not to have a more appealing university system. Insane.
Anonymous wrote:SUNY Bing graduate here. Yeah it's an ugly campus, but it didn't affect me. I wasn't looking for a pretty school, but the best SUNY I could get into and I went. It is a great mix of, yeah you still have frat parties and bars, but people are NOT there for a party school. Everyone really cares about academics. There is also the free library bus that goes back and forth to Cornell on the weekends.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Some kids from this area go to SUNY-Binghamton. And doesn't New Paltz have a good reputation for performing arts?
But overall the SUNY schools don't have very attractive campuses and are in cold locations in towns that aren't exactly thriving. Who'd want to live there if many of the kids at those schools are going home on the weekends? You could have a similar experience at UMBC or George Mason and the weather would be better.
This^^^
Most are unattractive campuses and located in the middle of nowhere with bad weather. There are many "better options" that are also affordable.
This. And another negative is that as a consequence of those things, the student body is overwhelmingly NY state residents. That's true of most public schools of course, but there is a big difference between a place like Pitt, that is about 35% out of state, vs a place like SUNY Binghamton, where 95% of students are from NY. And that percentage is even lower at other SUNY schools. No geographic diversity at all.
Though to be honest, NY state offers a tremendous amount of diversity: kids from upstate (rural/depressed), vs. New York City ('nuf said) vs. the suburbs (Westchester, Long Island). On one level, the state itself has a huge range of types of people/communities.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
I have always wondered about this too. They are a great value, even for out-of-state residents. Weather might be a factor, but plenty of people from the DMV choose SLACs and some out-of-state publics in cold climates.
But those schools generally have better academic reputations ... I mean you could equally ask why more DMV students aren't going to Penn State's regional campuses. The answer is because they don't want to and have better options.
The ignorance of some DCUM commenters -- and their insistence on advertising it -- is breathtaking.
On US News' list of National Universities, SUNY/Stony Brook ranks #77 (tie); SUNY/Binghamton ranks #83; and SUNY/Buffalo ranks #89 (tie).
That's equal to, or higher ranked than, several nearby OOS schools that get exhaustive interest and discussion on DCUM -- Penn State (#77- tie), Delaware (#89) or Temple (#121)
Those SUNY flagships are also higher ranked than several out of area OOS schools that frequently surface on DCUM -- Colorado/Boulder (#97), Arizona State (#121 - tie), and UVM (#121 - tie).
They're signficantly higher ranked than the southern universities and flagships that some trolls keep trying to push here -- Auburn (#97), South Carolina (#115), and Alabama (#137).
The SUNY flagships have stronger reputations than a lot of the schools that get talked up here on DCUM. That says a lot more about DCUM commenters, and their low information, and their priorities, than it does about the SUNY system.
Anonymous wrote:Strong words, backed up by nonsense numbers. Per Bing's CDS -- chrome-extension://efaidnbmnnnibpcajpcglclefindmkaj/https://www.binghamton.edu/offices/oir/upload_data/cds_2021_2022.pdf -- only 7% of undergrads are OOS. I haven't checked the other CDSes, but anyone who wants to can find actual data in them (in F1)...
Here's a clue, rocket scientist -- international students aren't from New York State either.
https://www.collegefactual.com/colleges/suny-at-binghamton/student-life/diversity/
Strong words, backed up by nonsense numbers. Per Bing's CDS -- chrome-extension://efaidnbmnnnibpcajpcglclefindmkaj/https://www.binghamton.edu/offices/oir/upload_data/cds_2021_2022.pdf -- only 7% of undergrads are OOS. I haven't checked the other CDSes, but anyone who wants to can find actual data in them (in F1)...
Anonymous wrote:
I have always wondered about this too. They are a great value, even for out-of-state residents. Weather might be a factor, but plenty of people from the DMV choose SLACs and some out-of-state publics in cold climates.
But those schools generally have better academic reputations ... I mean you could equally ask why more DMV students aren't going to Penn State's regional campuses. The answer is because they don't want to and have better options.
Anonymous wrote:And another negative is that as a consequence of those things, the student body is overwhelmingly NY state residents. That's true of most public schools of course, but there is a big difference between a place like Pitt, that is about 35% out of state, vs a place like SUNY Binghamton, where 95% of students are from NY. And that percentage is even lower at other SUNY schools. No geographic diversity at all.
No. At Binghamton, 82% of the students are from NY state. At Buffalo, 84% of the students are from NY state. At Stony Brook, 79% of the students are from NY state.
If you make numbers up and present them as facts, it's the same as lying.
And of course, even the correct numbers are misleading, because NY is a large state of over 20 million people (larger than all of New England combined, or all the Rocky Mountain states combined, or all the Great Plains states combined) and is also notably more varied and diverse than many other states. Only on DCUM is pulling in more UMC kids from more suburbs considered "diversity."
And another negative is that as a consequence of those things, the student body is overwhelmingly NY state residents. That's true of most public schools of course, but there is a big difference between a place like Pitt, that is about 35% out of state, vs a place like SUNY Binghamton, where 95% of students are from NY. And that percentage is even lower at other SUNY schools. No geographic diversity at all.
Anonymous wrote:What about SUNY Albany? I grew up in NY and remember that as the sort of flagship. Is it still? See no mention of it.