chemistry at yale

<p>i heard this is really good</p>

<p>especially the orgo part</p>

<p>hey, orgo's fun :)</p>

<p>... then again, I'm <em>entirely</em> too much of a chem-dork-science-major...</p>

<p>do you know anything about</p>

<p>ADV. orgo at yale?</p>

<p>do you mean freshman orgo? there are three different tracks of orgo - frosh orgo, regular orgo, and what I call "off-sequence" orgo (pretty much the same as regular orgo except starting in the spring). if you're a chem major, there are also advanced structure and synthesis classes (graduate level) open to chem majors.</p>

<p>what exactly are you asking about in terms of "ADV. orgo at yale?"</p>

<p>maybe he/she's talking about synthesis?</p>

<p>i meant frosh orgo
and synthesis orgo</p>

<p>how are they?
grading wise and experience/learning/professor-wise</p>

<p>Yale has the nation's best chemistry department, according to the ISI/Sciencewatch rankings, which are the most respected rankings in the world (scientists get or lose tenure based on them!). Better than Caltech, MIT, Harvard, Northwestern, UC Berkeley, U North Carolina, Carnegie Mellon (CMU) and UCSD.</p>

<p><a href="http://www.sciencewatch.com/nov-dec2002/sw_nov-dec2002_page2.htm#Chemistry%5B/url%5D"&gt;http://www.sciencewatch.com/nov-dec2002/sw_nov-dec2002_page2.htm#Chemistry&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/p>

<p>"Yale has the nation's best chemistry department"</p>

<p>12th-best, according to both u.s. news and NRC rankings.</p>

<p><a href="http://talk.collegeconfidential.com/showthread.php?p=2181457&highlight=chemistry#post2181457%5B/url%5D"&gt;http://talk.collegeconfidential.com/showthread.php?p=2181457&highlight=chemistry#post2181457&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/p>

<p><a href="http://www.stat.tamu.edu/%7Ejnewton/nrc_rankings/nrc41.html#area28%5B/url%5D"&gt;http://www.stat.tamu.edu/~jnewton/nrc_rankings/nrc41.html#area28&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/p>

<p>Harvard is a fine school, so are Yale and Princeton.</p>

<p>But for cross-admits, more students choose H over Y, H over P and Y over P. That's the fact. That's why we call "HYP" not "YHP" nor "PHY". :)</p>

<p>more likely, we call them HYP because that is the order of their founding. if you read "the chosen" by jerome karabel, you'll learn that cross-admit rates between the three have fluctuated a lot in the last century. harvard "pulled away" in this regard rather recently. its current edge over YP is clear and acknowledged, but i have never seen any numbers for Y vs. P except hints that the former's edge over the latter is very narrow, if one exists at all.</p>

<hr>

<p>The three universities, when named together, are almost invariably named in the order Harvard, Yale, and Princeton. This could reflect their relative age—their founding dates being 1636, 1701, and 1746, respectively[16]—which in turn is an important point of institutional pride, since it governs the order in which the institutions march in academic processions.</p>

<p>Harvard is also the largest of the three by most measures, Yale second, and Princeton third, and other characteristics related to size have the same rank order.</p>

<p>It has been also been suggested that the name ordering is related to a famous school rivalry between Harvard and Yale, although a more prosaic explanation is simply that the original 1880s journalistic initialism was coined that way because this ordering is one that actually results in an initialism that is also an acronym, HYP, and it simply stuck.</p>

<p><a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Big_Three_%28universities%29%5B/url%5D"&gt;http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Big_Three_%28universities%29&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/p>