<p>Please give your opinionated ranking of the Ivies in terms of their undergraduate programs. Please don't take their graduate programs into consideration. (When ranking Penn, please separate Wharton from the rest of Penn).</p>
<p>UM.</p>
<p>Honestly, I hate rankings. Each school excels at certain subjects, and, if anything, I feel departments could be ranked.</p>
<p>Sorry for the useless post, but every time rankings come around, I hear more and more how people put WAY too much weight on them.</p>
<p>Princeton is #1. That's all you need to know.</p>
<p>but wharton > princeton for biz.</p>
<p>:)</p>
<p>Overall Undergraduate Experience</p>
<p>Princeton
Yale
Harvard
Columbia
Dartmouth
Penn
Brown
Cornell</p>
<p>Preparation for investment banking, consulting, and other stuff that Wharton is good at
Harvard, Princeton, Wharton
Yale
Columbia
and so on</p>
<p>Rankings are terrible. Go visit. Talk to people. Live.</p>
<p>
[quote]
but wharton > princeton for biz.
[/quote]
</p>
<p><a href="When%20ranking%20Penn,%20please%20separate%20Wharton%20from%20the%20rest%20of%20Penn">quote</a>
[/quote]
</p>
<p>Oh, snap: got 'em!</p>
<br>
<blockquote> <blockquote> <p>Please don't take their graduate programs into consideration.<<< You can't do that because 1) Many undergraduate classes are taught by graduate students, home work correct by graduate students and lab are run by graduate students. 2) Many professors (good ones) will leave if there is no graduate school. 3) The schools because famous and therefore become attractive because of the success of the graduate schools as well as faculties rearches (with graduate students' help).</p> </blockquote> </blockquote>
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