#23 for public universities is not mediocre... I think it's a university with a perception and PR/advertising problem.Well... I think Minnesota is not what it could be. As a whole, it is a just-above-mediocre flagship public school that is situated in a somewhat high end metropolis.
But we've not turned into the sort of top-notch place we could be. We're not Berkeley or Michigan or UCLA or UVA or Texas or UNC, etc. We've just not had the institutional focus on being a good university. Which is a pity. Because we could be.
One of the downsides to being associated with great peers is that you can look average or below average compared to them.#23 for public universities is not mediocre... I think it's a university with a perception and PR/advertising problem.
For sure you want to be the cheapest house in the expensive block!Do you want to be the 7th best house in the best neighborhood or the best house in a terrible neighborhood?
I mean we’re not looking at the fine details here.Highly ranked business, engineering, medical, dental schools.
It's a woke ass liberal university. Nothing more... Nothing less .. but whatever. Still love the football squad
The point is the U doesn't "suck bad". It is a great school that has a rich academic and research history with breakthrough accomplishments. Next time you are on campus, take maybe an hour to go down the Scholars Walk.I mean we’re not looking at the fine details here.
We all know what UMN has to offer but I just didn’t realize we ranked so low in bigger picture in comparison to other original B1G schools aside from the new comer schools!
Man, I hate Michigan football and I knew UMich is a solid University but looking at this source, they’re near the top in all categories!
On a brighter note, Iowa is lower than us in 3 out of 4 categories
The point is the U doesn't "suck bad". It is a great school that has a rich academic and research history with breakthrough accomplishments. Next time you are on campus, take maybe an hour to go down the Scholars Walk.
Part of the rankings looks at acceptance rates. The U chooses to have a higher acceptance rate.
If there are 50 state flagships, and you are ranked #23.... You're just above mediocre.#23 for public universities is not mediocre... I think it's a university with a perception and PR/advertising problem.
Are you reading the same set of charts?I mean we’re not looking at the fine details here.
We all know what UMN has to offer but I just didn’t realize we ranked so low in bigger picture in comparison to other original B1G schools aside from the new comer schools!
California has 6 in the top 10, this thread has me concerned about Gopherholers.If there are 50 state flagships, and you are ranked #23.... You're just above mediocre.
I don't agree that "we suck." It's just that we're not Michigan or Berkeley or UCLA or UVA or UNC or Texas. We could be. But we don't have the institutional mandate of being elite. Which is a pity.
Purdue and Indiana are in the same state.California has 6 in the top 10, this thread has me concerned about Gopherholers.
But we don't have the institutional mandate of being elite. Which is a pity.
Agreed, I see the U as mid level in those 4 chosen metrics among a list of the most prestigious major universities in the USA.I don’t see any “suck bad” in that infographic.
I'd still have to look at the criteria the USN, SR and WSJ use to rank universities. That one seems like it it more geared to undergraduate education and the research spending applies to graduate school IMO. I know that people like to see rankings, but I don't think that as presented they mean all that much, the schools listed are all good ones. History shows that those lists do not change much from year to year for at least the last 40 years.Agreed, I see the U as mid level in those 4 chosen metrics among a list of the most prestigious major universities in the USA.
Whichever school charges in-state tuition should get a massive bump in anyone's personal rankings of universities.I'd still have to look at the criteria the USN, SR and WSJ use to rank universities. That one seems like it it more geared to undergraduate education and the research spending applies to graduate school IMO. I know that people like to see rankings, but I don't think that as presented they mean all that much, the schools listed are all good ones. History shows that those lists do not change much from year to year for at least the last 40 years.
Agree.I always have mixed feelings about those things. Certainly there should be opportunities for folks who are excelling academically to have a place to continue to do so.
At the same time we need an educated workforce and just focusing on educating a small group who excel just academically (sometimes not really applicable to the rest of life) ... I don't know if that really is doing a huge amount of good.
There's also the issue where institutions filter out all the best students and they do well and the institution is praised. But doing well with the best is no surprise and I wonder how your really quantify "we made them better" vs "this was probably the outcome for these people anyway...".
Now would i go to such a place and reap all the benefits, you bet, even if just to be surrounded by folks willing to try and work hard ... but ... I just don't know if the institution itself is doing that much for everyone, or if it does everyone good to have a whole university chasing those kinds of academic metrics ... and academic metrics and all the BS that surrounds them is something else too.
Depends on the college and what you are doing too.Agree.
But, this goes to my point: the mandate for the U of MN has never been to be top-notch. So it's not. if you have a kid that wants to break into the top echelons, you send him/her elsewhere. (Not saying it's impossible from UMN, but saying it's swimming upstream.). That's what I did with my kid. I sent him to UMich. Even though I love UMN. They're just in different stratospheres. Which is horrible, because we could be in UMich's stratosphere, if that were the mandate. But it's never been the mandate, and so we're not.
Not really.Depends on the college and what you are doing too.
Carlson seems highly thought of.