<p>I figured more than a few people would be interested in the breakdown of the US News rankings. I encourage anyone that is making significant use of any ranking (ie. most high school seniors on these boards) to look at sub-rankings. You may find how you weigh categories is different from the composite scores of the rankings.</p>
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[quote]
In academic reputation we rank sixth. We also rank first in terms of the number of graduate fields that are considered to be in the top 10 of their discipline. In recent years, there has been a push at Cornell to combine a number of academic departments (i.e. the new economics department), purportedly to better highlight our strengths so that we may be perceived as more academically impressive. Perhaps this is misguided. Our strategic plan calls for us to be widely recognized as a top-ten research university, but it appears we are already there. We are lower in the academic reputation score in the world rankings (19th), but this is largely because of incredible clustering at the top we scored 99.7 percent as high as the top-ranked school.
<p>Isn’t Cornell University the only hybrid public/private university in the nation ? Aren’t 3 of the 7 schools/colleges state funded with lower admissions standards for state residents ? Don’t wrestling & ice hockey triumphs count ?</p>
<p>Axelrod, Cornell is NOT a hybrid public/private university. Cornell is a private university. 3 colleges receive state subsidies, so NY residents in those 3 colleges receive reduced tuition. Beyond that, there is no difference between Cornell’s 7 colleges. Admission standards are not lowered for state residents.</p>
<p>I beg to differ…just look at the stats - it’s pretty obvious
you’ve got to be uninformed or delusional if you seriously think admissions standards are equal throughout the 7 colleges, esp. for NYS residents applying to the state schools</p>
<p>don’t want to start another long, flame thread (the older folks will know what I’m talking about), so I’ll leave it at that</p>