Hmm. Not sure the numbering is even close to useful (if not possibly inverted), and the auto-reading mispronunciations are jarring. But the biggest problem, even given a stress on liberal arts colleges, is the omission of UCLA or Michigan (or UNC, UVA, UW). I might agree Occidental, Kenyon and Grinnell are overlooked schools, but I can't ever see ranking them over Pomona, Harvey Mudd or Wash U.
It's shocking that you couldn't find someone who could properly pronounce Caltech, Grinnell, Macalister, and the abbreviation for "number", i.e. "No." which the announcer pronounced "no". Did no one in the production of this video bother to listen to it and make sure it was properly pronounced? Is it really possible that the man reading didn't know that Caltech is short for California Institute of Technology such that the short version, Caltech, should be pronounced as "Cal Tech"? There were several other glaring mispronunciations as well. Get your thing together and show your audience a little more respect!!
Ditto…. Yes why is that? You need to do more research on the topic of omitting USC… high Academic standards, research, lots of upscale amnesties for the students, absolutely cool campus and much more! I know first hand, my Daughter is an Alumni (2003) and my Grandson is a Sophomore in the Marshall School of Business !
I would say that based on this list, schools like Oberlin, Kenyon, etc. should definitely have not been there and usc is much better. but when you're comparing usc to schools like hopkins, mit, and Stanford, usc does not even come close to comparing... sorry. I would say that ucla, uc Berkeley, nyu, washu, etc. should definitely be in those spots, but usc could perhaps be a stretch
unless you give criteria by which to rank these schools, your list is debatable. my crieria are intelligence, creativity, curiosity, scholarship, humanities, intellectual integrity among students and faculty.
Very misunderstood. Ivys pay for most of students tuition if parents make under 65k. Some like NYU are terrible financial institutions, so you just have to research, and get scholarships.
I don't have too much confidence in these American colleges because most of them have officially abandoned the traditional method of recruiting students based on objective standardized testing. Instead, they are using an untested method which they called Holistic Approach that puts excessive emphasis on factors like extracurricular activities, teacher recommendations, college application essays, racial quota, special preference given to children of alumni and first generation college students etc. Make no mistakes. These factors are completely irrelevant to a student's academic potential. Despite more and more fancier programs these colleges are creating, the academic quality of their students will decline and so will the academic standards of these colleges.
I don't really see this as much with the Supreme Court ruling on racial quotas and legacy admissions. Case in point, my friend is well to do, black, and a graduate of Princeton University. This made her daughter, also black, a Princeton legacy. She was a straight A student at the public school and had a 1500 SAT. She was not accepted to Princeton; she went to Oberlin instead. In talking to her mother, she simply stated- they aren't looking at legacies anymore. As far as a holistic approach, I don't think that's completely true. We are going through the process now and the 2 most important factors are: 1. transcript, ie. grades, GPA, class rank and 2. level of difficulty ie. how many honors and AP classes the student has taken. Ivy Leagues are looking for around 10 or more AP classes, plus honors classes. That said, AP tests are "objective standardized tests". The SAT/ ACT seem redundant to me for kids that are already taking all of these Advanced Placement tests. First generation students have a slight advantage, it's what they are looking for at the moment, the pendulum has swung to the anti-legacy approach. It has always been the case that athletes have a huge advantage; athletes who are recruited for a specific sport will be admitted if the coach recommends them to admissions. Colleges have thrown in a lot of essays and college essays are a b*tch. You want to apply to 12-ish top-tier schools, then have fun writing 30 or so "supplemental essays". Those essays are no joke; you have to have an authentic voice, tell a meaningful story and tie it into something meaningful you have done or learned in school. They are looking for very high quality essays, which may be difficult for people who are more technical, like prospective engineering majors. Academic standards won't decline at the top institutions, if you can't cut it, then you won't graduate. It's as simple as that. I saw this first hand when our state university (Rutgers) had a college (Livingston College) that had open admissions. A lot of those kids failed out; it was almost like theft on the part of the school admitting kids that could hardly read or write.
@@krisq3616 I don't know where you're getting your information from but here is what I know about the Princeton admission process. 1. In an email to me, Princeton Director of Admission, Matthew Alander admitted that Princeton is using a holistic review process to select their first year students and because of that, they could not provide me with the specific information I requested regarding their admission criteria. 2. Princeton University has officially declared on their website that application for admission to the University is TEST OPTIONAL. 3. I requested Princeton to publish the average (or median) weighted and unweighted GPA and the middle 50% weighted and unweighted GPA of those who were admitted without submission of standardized test scores and Princeton turned me down. Why do you think Princeton is so afraid of releasing the statistics if they did look at the GPAs of the applicants as you say? 3. In a subsequent follow-up telephone conversation with me, Matthew Alander admitted that they didn't really know how to evaluate the GPAs of the applicants. I can understand what he was talking about. There are hundreds of thousands of high schools all across America. I, myself, would not know how to compare the GPAs of a student from a high school in New Jersey with a student from Alabama for example. 4. Princeton University has never indicated publicly or privately or in any way that they would look at the AP objective scores in their admission process. Where do you get the idea that AP courses consideration is part of their admission process? 5. I requested Princeton to tell their freshmen drop-out rates in the years 2019, 2020, 2021 and 2022 and they turned me down. How can you be so confident that academic standard at Princeton University would not decline? Yes, some kids are failing out at Rutgers but what do you know about Princeton? At the end of the day, even if Princeton has a higher graduation rate than Rutgers, it could only mean that the instructors at Princeton are making things too easy for their students. You need to have an objective comparison of the academic requirements at both schools before you can make any conclusion. 6. All in all, if Princeton is so good as you say, why are they so afraid of releasing any information or statistics?
Don't just think they not delivered in y'all state like I didn't mean to always let me get hated on like if y'all just own the chemistry through your ids even
Call tetch? Sure, but you'll have to give me the number. So far, u. Of Chicago mit and Stanford aren't in the top ten. Also, yeah could you not have a human do this for some reason
I just don't like till I want over seas back in even that I won't just think I'm not I can stand through something I'm just Marcel even from my face is almost no longer
Like many commenters, I was really put off by the AI voice flunking pronounciation, especially in a video about higher ed! Perhaps the editors need to finish high school first. I have no problem with the inclusion of liberal arts schools; frankly, it should be a requirement before specialized studies in whatever field. It really helps to have an ethical grounding before designing atomic bombs. And yeah, some good small schools were not included: Berea (free), Wooster (terrific independent study program), Colorado College (one course for nine weeks throughout the four years), Haverford, Middlebury, Olin to name a few. Nobody cares about my opinion (that's OK) but I'd suggest kids looking for a college ignore the Ivies and many of the "famous" schools on this list--you'll get TAs for instructors, not the Nobel Prize winners. On the other hand, if your primary objective is to be rich and famous the day after graduating, as opposed to getting an eduction in a field you're really interested in, then by all means go for the big name schools.
That's just your personal opinion. Many people value the education and they are making their lives better. More than 400 people liked this video so far. It is not worthless 😄
If you like any other great university in USA, please let us know in the comments. thank you
Hmm. Not sure the numbering is even close to useful (if not possibly inverted), and the auto-reading mispronunciations are jarring. But the biggest problem, even given a stress on liberal arts colleges, is the omission of UCLA or Michigan (or UNC, UVA, UW). I might agree Occidental, Kenyon and Grinnell are overlooked schools, but I can't ever see ranking them over Pomona, Harvey Mudd or Wash U.
UCLA or Michigan (or UNC, UVA, UW) these universities are also featured in our other videos.
ua-cam.com/video/OBrgEXEdHLc/v-deo.html
Yeah.
The list seems to have been inverted.
It's shocking that you couldn't find someone who could properly pronounce Caltech, Grinnell, Macalister, and the abbreviation for "number", i.e. "No." which the announcer pronounced "no". Did no one in the production of this video bother to listen to it and make sure it was properly pronounced? Is it really possible that the man reading didn't know that Caltech is short for California Institute of Technology such that the short version, Caltech, should be pronounced as "Cal Tech"? There were several other glaring mispronunciations as well. Get your thing together and show your audience a little more respect!!
It's because the voice is A.I.
No way
Also "alumnee"
Its narrated by a computer
"Karate" gets butchered too.
Ditto…. Yes why is that? You need to do more research on the topic of omitting USC… high Academic standards, research, lots of upscale amnesties for the students, absolutely cool campus and much more! I know first hand, my Daughter is an Alumni (2003) and my Grandson is a Sophomore in the Marshall School of
Business !
I would say that based on this list, schools like Oberlin, Kenyon, etc. should definitely have not been there and usc is much better. but when you're comparing usc to schools like hopkins, mit, and Stanford, usc does not even come close to comparing... sorry.
I would say that ucla, uc Berkeley, nyu, washu, etc. should definitely be in those spots, but usc could perhaps be a stretch
unless you give criteria by which to rank these schools, your list is debatable.
my crieria are intelligence, creativity, curiosity, scholarship, humanities, intellectual integrity among students and faculty.
Why isn’t Notre Dame ever in these kind of videos??
Notre Dame has one of the best business schools in usa. It is definitely covered in our videos. ua-cam.com/video/JOSfAG6czBo/v-deo.html
No mention of UCLA, University of Michigan, or UCSD??
A collection of some unusually quirky colleges. I sincerely question the validity of some of these universities.
Is there a list for community colleges?
thanks for the question. if you are interested in community colleges, we can make a video on that.
Thank you. We can work on that later
Renumbering backwards should be done !!
Ah, 20 more universities that will squeeze me dry of all my money and burden me with 30 years of student loans. Thanks for the educational video!
welcome
Very misunderstood. Ivys pay for most of students tuition if parents make under 65k. Some like NYU are terrible financial institutions, so you just have to research, and get scholarships.
My daughter is going to WashU free thanks to merit scholarships and financial aid. Don’t let sticker prices deter you.
You didn't include UCLA, et al; but you put in a lot of lesser colleges. This shows your prejudice. I don't overly respect this list.
UCLA is in the Top 10. It is on this video. this is the first video. ua-cam.com/video/dS20_Ij4O-Y/v-deo.html
Wow, please find someone who can pronounce caltech and others
the AI reader in this video is absolutely atrocious
很特別的分享!
Someone who take y'all down to person till you not trying magic and stuff
Whats up with all those liberal arts schools?
I think it’s good to include them too
USC is ranked higher than half of these in almost all polls, yet omitted from this list. Strange.
University of second choice has been gaming the rankings for years now
There are many other universities that rank higher than the liberal-arts dominated institutions on this pathetic list of woke colleges/universities.
Why do the videos in this series mispronounce names of colleges so consistently. Please change.
What is “ColTech”? 😅
umh. Australian😅 accent or something. I don't know
@@R247Success ignore the mockers. I love your accent
Stanford is the best of the best.
yeah!
To see if Ryan and them need help running planes even till everybodys happy and satisfied
I don't have too much confidence in these American colleges because most of them have officially abandoned the traditional method of recruiting students based on objective standardized testing. Instead, they are using an untested method which they called Holistic Approach that puts excessive emphasis on factors like extracurricular activities, teacher recommendations, college application essays, racial quota, special preference given to children of alumni and first generation college students etc. Make no mistakes. These factors are completely irrelevant to a student's academic potential. Despite more and more fancier programs these colleges are creating, the academic quality of their students will decline and so will the academic standards of these colleges.
Thank you. You have a good point. I completely agree
Except for the first 4-5 colleges, the rest seems like an informercial for liberal arts colleges in disguise.
@@ven41618 want to cover both science and liberal arts colleges
I don't really see this as much with the Supreme Court ruling on racial quotas and legacy admissions. Case in point, my friend is well to do, black, and a graduate of Princeton University. This made her daughter, also black, a Princeton legacy. She was a straight A student at the public school and had a 1500 SAT. She was not accepted to Princeton; she went to Oberlin instead. In talking to her mother, she simply stated- they aren't looking at legacies anymore. As far as a holistic approach, I don't think that's completely true.
We are going through the process now and the 2 most important factors are: 1. transcript, ie. grades, GPA, class rank and 2. level of difficulty ie. how many honors and AP classes the student has taken. Ivy Leagues are looking for around 10 or more AP classes, plus honors classes. That said, AP tests are "objective standardized tests". The SAT/ ACT seem redundant to me for kids that are already taking all of these Advanced Placement tests. First generation students have a slight advantage, it's what they are looking for at the moment, the pendulum has swung to the anti-legacy approach. It has always been the case that athletes have a huge advantage; athletes who are recruited for a specific sport will be admitted if the coach recommends them to admissions. Colleges have thrown in a lot of essays and college essays are a b*tch. You want to apply to 12-ish top-tier schools, then have fun writing 30 or so "supplemental essays". Those essays are no joke; you have to have an authentic voice, tell a meaningful story and tie it into something meaningful you have done or learned in school. They are looking for very high quality essays, which may be difficult for people who are more technical, like prospective engineering majors.
Academic standards won't decline at the top institutions, if you can't cut it, then you won't graduate. It's as simple as that. I saw this first hand when our state university (Rutgers) had a college (Livingston College) that had open admissions. A lot of those kids failed out; it was almost like theft on the part of the school admitting kids that could hardly read or write.
@@krisq3616 I don't know where you're getting your information from but here is what I know about the Princeton admission process.
1. In an email to me, Princeton Director of Admission, Matthew Alander admitted that Princeton is using a holistic review process to select their first year students and because of that, they could not provide me with the specific information I requested regarding their admission criteria.
2. Princeton University has officially declared on their website that application for admission to the University is TEST OPTIONAL.
3. I requested Princeton to publish the average (or median) weighted and unweighted GPA and the middle 50% weighted and unweighted GPA of those who were admitted without submission of standardized test scores and Princeton turned me down. Why do you think Princeton is so afraid of releasing the statistics if they did look at the GPAs of the applicants as you say?
3. In a subsequent follow-up telephone conversation with me, Matthew Alander admitted that they didn't really know how to evaluate the GPAs of the applicants. I can understand what he was talking about. There are hundreds of thousands of high schools all across America. I, myself, would not know how to compare the GPAs of a student from a high school in New Jersey with a student from Alabama for example.
4. Princeton University has never indicated publicly or privately or in any way that they would look at the AP objective scores in their admission process. Where do you get the idea that AP courses consideration is part of their admission process?
5. I requested Princeton to tell their freshmen drop-out rates in the years 2019, 2020, 2021 and 2022 and they turned me down. How can you be so confident that academic standard at Princeton University would not decline? Yes, some kids are failing out at Rutgers but what do you know about Princeton? At the end of the day, even if Princeton has a higher graduation rate than Rutgers, it could only mean that the instructors at Princeton are making things too easy for their students. You need to have an objective comparison of the academic requirements at both schools before you can make any conclusion.
6. All in all, if Princeton is so good as you say, why are they so afraid of releasing any information or statistics?
This is bogus by not having the University of Illinois.
University of Illinois is a great school. It is included in several of our videos in this channel. You can check them out. Thank you for the comment
Don't just think they not delivered in y'all state like I didn't mean to always let me get hated on like if y'all just own the chemistry through your ids even
GriNELL College, please.
thank you
Thank you Jack
This feels like ai 😮😮
It is not AI. This is a human voice.
Carnegie Mellon?
Sir 6.48 CGPA graduate in ECE can go for CS in Ms in US Universityies please tell me sir.
Call tetch? Sure, but you'll have to give me the number. So far, u. Of Chicago mit and Stanford aren't in the top ten. Also, yeah could you not have a human do this for some reason
Y'all saw us for a second to be back as a leech
Call tech?
I just don't like till I want over seas back in even that I won't just think I'm not I can stand through something I'm just Marcel even from my face is almost no longer
Ma CAL ester, please.
Like many commenters, I was really put off by the AI voice flunking pronounciation, especially in a video about higher ed! Perhaps the editors need to finish high school first. I have no problem with the inclusion of liberal arts schools; frankly, it should be a requirement before specialized studies in whatever field. It really helps to have an ethical grounding before designing atomic bombs. And yeah, some good small schools were not included: Berea (free), Wooster (terrific independent study program), Colorado College (one course for nine weeks throughout the four years), Haverford, Middlebury, Olin to name a few. Nobody cares about my opinion (that's OK) but I'd suggest kids looking for a college ignore the Ivies and many of the "famous" schools on this list--you'll get TAs for instructors, not the Nobel Prize winners. On the other hand, if your primary objective is to be rich and famous the day after graduating, as opposed to getting an eduction in a field you're really interested in, then by all means go for the big name schools.
Just Justin Bieber best friend or something
I don't
有本事!去她面前說!
有勇氣!去她爸面前!
有廉恥!去他面前告知!
Call Tech? CAM bridge? Why invent new pronunciation?
P.s Michael Jackson
To keep people like him and them off the streets
I a stop claiming Maxine if she been knew me through there even or can't cook
No MIT?
UVA? Georgetown? UMich?
they are here ua-cam.com/video/dS20_Ij4O-Y/v-deo.html
Uraneous and venus marcel
Case Western Reserve
Carnegie Mellon
Rice
NYU
UT Austin
Boulder
Georgia Tech
Arizona State
Perdue
Notre Dame
They just not me I'm a zillionare they just know too much they just too high about Chinese burgers and stakes even
Surprised that you ranked Stanford u. #20, what the heck, this sucks🤯are you kidding, this needs emergency fixing, reverse your ranking🤯
It is not an ordered list. It is a numbered list. Stanford is one of the best in USA. You are right.
Whatever whatever one has the coin river we shouldna let y'all allow fighting right there right away
Mit,
So will y'all place those above our familiar lol selves for once
mit
brao
What about George Mason University
Huh?
LOL
What about it?
We hate them if not me just like that about me
If they just watching remeo must die right now or something
胡說八道!
All of these overpriced TOILETS are just as worthless as the Ivy League. This video is worthless.
That's just your personal opinion. Many people value the education and they are making their lives better. More than 400 people liked this video so far. It is not worthless 😄
No southern schools? Other than Duke?