…Stop and think: What is an academic institution’s prestige based on?</p>
<p>Academic prestige is based mostly on the research achievements of the faculty. Places like Harvard or Stanford have many professors who are among the leading experts in their respective fields, including some who have won Nobel Prizes.</p>
<p>Good for them. But is it good for you, if you are a student at Prestige U.?</p>
<p>Big-name professors are unlikely to be teaching you freshman English or introductory math. Some may not be teaching you anything at all, unless and until you go on to postgraduate study.</p>
<p>In other words, the people who generated the prestige which attracted you to the college may be seen walking about the campus but are less likely to be seen standing in front of your classroom when you begin your college education.</p>
<p>Lower level courses are usually left to be taught by junior faculty members or even graduate students.</p>
<p>Yet these courses are often the foundation on which higher level courses are built.</p>
<p>If you don’t really master introductory calculus, physics or economics, you are unlikely to do well in higher level courses which presuppose that you already have a foundation on which they can build.</p>
<p>By contrast, at a small college without the prestige of big-name research universities, the introductory courses which provide a foundation for higher courses are more likely to be taught by experienced professors who are teachers more so than researchers.</p>
<p>Maybe that is why graduates of such colleges often go on to do better than the graduates of big-name research universities.</p>
<p>You may never have heard of Harvey Mudd College but a higher percentage of its graduates go on to get Ph.D.s than do the graduates of Harvard, Yale, Stanford or M.I.T. So do the graduates of Grinnell, Reed, and various other small colleges.</p>
<p>Of the chief executive officers of the 50 largest American corporations surveyed in 2006, only four had Ivy League degrees. Some including Michael Dell of Dell computers and Bill Gates of Microsoft had no degree at all.</p>
<p>Apparently getting into Prestige U. is not the life or death thing that some students or their parents think it is.</p>
<p>Unfortunately, prestige rankings are so hyped in the media especially by U.S. News & World Report magazine that many people think that is how to choose a college.</p>
<p>What you really want is not the “best” college but the college that fits you best. For that, you need in-depth information, not statistical rankings. For such information, you could start looking up colleges in the 900-page guide, [“Choosing</a> the Right College.”](<a href=“http://www.amazon.com/Choosing-Right-College-Americas-Schools/dp/0802845371]"Choosing”>http://www.amazon.com/Choosing-Right-College-Americas-Schools/dp/0802845371) After that, campus visits would be in order.