<p>Ok, this is going to go in all the ivy league colleges' discussion boards. In your opinion, which do you think (as objectively as possible) is the best Ivy? Which is the worst? And why?</p>
<p>This will be interesting.</p>
<p>Ok, this is going to go in all the ivy league colleges' discussion boards. In your opinion, which do you think (as objectively as possible) is the best Ivy? Which is the worst? And why?</p>
<p>This will be interesting.</p>
<p>Princeton all the way</p>
<ol>
<li>great campus</li>
<li>great aid</li>
<li>great profs who actually care about teaching undergrads</li>
</ol>
<p>what about the worst?</p>
<p>HAH, ask me in two days ;)</p>
<p>Oh wait, they'll all be equally bad for me :(</p>
<p>Isn't anyone else just a little bit sick of these incendiary posts? I would tell you that Princeton is the best. A Yale student would tell you yale's the best. A Harvard student would tell you that Harvard's the best. The answer, though, "objectively", is that there is no objective best, there's only a subjective best--that is to say, there's only a "what's best for you." If you want rural, go to Darthmouth. If you want the big city, go to Columbia. Especially among Princeton, Harvard, and Yale, which are all equally good in their own ways, the differences are too subjective to say which one is better; one can only really judge which of the three is better for him/her. If you really doesn't understand that, monkeyman, then you should question what you want out of a college education. (You seem to be looking at things in a very black-and-white, overly-simplistic way.)</p>
<p>monkeyman5...Post your stats so we can compare you to the rest of the Ivy candidates.</p>
<p>and the sad reality is that if you take one person and put him in dartmouth and you take a clone of him and put him in columbia or yale or penn or harvard etc. their life trajectories would be pretty much <em>exactly</em> the same.</p>