How do you rank Barnard?

<p>Guys, how do you rank Barnard? Barnard’s rank on U.S news is 29 for liberal arts school, but i think Barnard is underrated.</p>

<p>what do you guys think?</p>

<p>and are there many Ivy students use Barnard as backup?</p>

<p>how is Barnard comparing to Wellesley? Wellesley’s rank is #4, which is pretty high comparing to Barnard, but i think Barnard isn’t much worse than Wellesley.</p>

<p>Yeah.. the admit rates for Barnard and Wellesley are very close. Not sure what they are exactly, but Barnard might even be lower. The schools are different.. not better/worse in my opinion.</p>

<p>Yes, I too think that Barnard is underrated by U.S. News. But it's not like it really matters...Barnard is far more popular than its USNWR ranking.</p>

<p>what is USNWR</p>

<p>In this range of the rating scale it comes down to personal preference. I know of one student who chose Barnard over Wellesley even though I would have predicted the opposite preference.</p>

<p>what is her reason then</p>

<p>NYC vs. a suburban town, maybe?</p>

<p>There were a number of reasons some of which were difficult to put into words. Part of it is that I was mistaken about her preferring a quiet suburban almost rural atmosphere. While my daughter is an introvert she is a talkative introvert, and in New York there may be 30 million people in the metropolitan district no one is going to make you talk to all of them. I also heard the dorms at Wellesley were a little nicer (more palatial in the words of the Princeton Review), but that was less important to her. When I got to see the dorms at Barnard I found that they were not bad at all. But when you get right down to it, it was the feel she got from the current students during the accepted student weekends. The Wellesley students seemed more subdued and controlled in their answers to questions. She felt they were all political science majors who had anticipated every question and prepared an answer, future CEOs. The students at Barnard had a more spontaneous "funky" feel to them. They also seemed more enthusiastic. An of course there's New York city. As you can see it is still a question as to what you prefer not your parents. Wellesley might be a better fit for me (had I been born female and 37 years later) but it wasn't for her. She is still very happy with her choice of college and the students with whom she attends. Visit the schools and just get a feel for them. Some of the selection process occurs at the gut level.</p>

<p>barnard is the most selective women's college in the country, in terms of low acceptance rates. this of course doesn't mean it's better than wellesley (even though in my opinion it is). one of the reasons it is ranked only #29 is because us news (that's the same as USNWR) doesn't count columbia's resources in barnard's total, so it makes barnard seem a lot worse since they only have one little library, even though students can take advantage of columbia's resources. i wouldn't base my decision on us news, though.
wellesley does have much nicer dorms, though. but you cant beat nyc!</p>

<p>I was accepted today at Barnard and Wellesley and I am definately Attending barnard over wellesley. My reasoning is that
- at barnard you get the benefits of an all womens school with all the benefits of a coed school
- NYC obviously
- i dont think i could deal with a secluded women's environment
- prestige of a degree from columbia
- columbia's great resources
thats my take on it</p>

<p>Just FYI - a lot of the Columbia students resent the fact that Barnard women use Barnard as a sort of back door to Columbia (that is, many of them apply to Columbia and don't get in and so they go to Barnard so they can use the resources, get the degree, etc.). I understand that the resources are shared (and so do they), but I wouldn't go around flaunting that you have a degree from Columbia, when it's a degree from Barnard. A degree from Barnard will have both "Barnard College" and "Columbia University" on it, while a degree from Columbia will say "Columbia College" "Columbia University". There is a difference.</p>

<p>Is the resentment by Columbia students very open?</p>

<p>Though no statistics are reported on this, here's someone else verifying what I've said so often...</p>

<p><a href="http://community.livejournal.com/columbia_u/131070.html%5B/url%5D"&gt;http://community.livejournal.com/columbia_u/131070.html&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/p>

<p>"As a current admissions office employee, I can out right say you are wrong. Most Barnard students actually do not apply to both schools. A lot of students that are not granted admission to either institution do apply to both schools (CC and BC reject the same applicants)..."</p>

<p>So while the resentment is sometimes pretty open, it's also pretty ignorant.</p>

<p>The things that really hurt Barnard's USNews ranking are: peer score (where I think the Columbia affiliation actually hurts us), alumna giving rate (though they're working on that), and the faculty resources rank. The last one is total B.S. Barnard ranks, like, 109th, even though we have some of the best paid profs of any LAC, because it's all deflated by COL in NYC. And no other LAC is in a city anywhere near as expensive. Besides that, living in NYC is actually a DRAW for professors, many of whom would take a pay-cut to live in a city rather than the middle of nowhere.</p>

<p>On my experience, I'd put Barnard #1. On more objective criteria, I think it's a solid top 20 (maybe even 15) and will eventually get there. Though most of the US News stuff is similar for Wellesley and Barnard, Wellesley's much better known and has a peer score that reflects that, which keeps it at the top and consequently also keeps its peer score high. Yay, feedback loops!</p>

<p>i agree.
i wish more barnard women would stop flaunting the columbia degree and start flaunting the barnard one. it's the part of "barnard college of columbia university" that i'm most proud of.</p>

<p>Reading that thread, it seems like there are quite a few Columbia students who think Barnard students are inferior and just mooching off of Columbia's resources and name recognition, as well as those who think SEAS students are inferior to CC students.</p>

<p>Actually, it sounds like Columbia students are stuck up in general.</p>

<p>I think it's possible to find some CC kids that are stuck up about it, but in my personal experience they are rare. I have friends on both campuses, and except for some administrative differences we don't feel like we go to different schools... we just go to different colleges within one university. The ones that are pompous enough to consider Barnard girls "inferior" generally fall into two groups; those who are just arrogant towards everyone around them (fellow CC kids included) and those who have some sort of inferiority complex and feel the need to find a target... either way, not kids whose opinions should be too troubling to us as strong women. As to the degree itself, I'm equally proud of both names that appear on it. I love being a student at Barnard College, and I love the University in which Barnard is located. I don't think it's necessary to be more proud of one over the other; they are entities that support each other, and when I graduate I will owe my educational experience to both of them as it is shaped by both of them together.</p>

<p>Very nicely said, justwondering.</p>

<p>Don't worry about some CC students being stuck up. There are stuck up people everywhere, some of whom won't like you for whatever reason. Plenty of CC students are just as awesome as their Barnard counterparts. ;) And some Barnard students are stuck up about whatever their personal elitism dictates. C'est la vie.</p>