<p>Usnews has recently ranked UCSD 38th in the nation. This makes it on par with UC Davis and one rank below last year's. We have also decreased in ranking in the ARWU's, and Times'. </p>
<p>You’re really going to let this one ranking article make you feel that UCSD isn’t a good school anymore? Congrats to UC Davis for ranking up, but that does not make UCSD worse.</p>
<p>Anyways, UCSD is higher ranked than UCD in many other ranking articles. UCSD will always be a good school, especially for engineering, biology, chemistry, economics, political science, mathematics, psychology etc., you name it. Many of UCSD’s departments are top 20. Who are you to say UCSD is not a top tier school anymore?</p>
<p>Just because of one ranking article where UCD went up one spot?</p>
<p>no no, that’s when we compare ALL the schools in the nation, which obviously includes private schools and everyone’s favorite: the Ivy-League. </p>
<p>UCSD is the 8th best college in the USA from a list of public colleges. </p>
<p>The Jacobs School of Engineering on the La Jolla campus was ranked fifth in the Biomedical/Biomedical Engineering category for the third consecutive year.</p>
<p>Don’t look into rankings too much. It is really just a gimmick. There is almost zero relevance to your college experience; the school would operate as usually regardless of its rank.</p>
<p>Because USNEWS reflects people’s predispositions about the relative rankings of universities the best. Essentially, what schools–on average–lead their graduates to the best post-graduate career paths (usually based on post-graduate income, national/international competitive scholarships and fellowships, acceptance rates to top graduate and professional schools, etc.).</p>
<p>Any ranking that places the Ivy League schools well out of contention for #1 are seldom considered seriously by the general public. This is why I don’t know of a single person at Northwestern who has even heard of the Washington Monthly ranking. It’s a specialized ranking for those who want to support a university that has focused on social mobility, etc., but it’s definitely not the list that corporate recruiters consult with when they’re deciding which colleges to target, for example.</p>
<p>Washington Monthly doesn’t rank it technically by the best but more by the impact of the colleges. USNEWS is pretty much the standard and will continue to be.</p>
<p>UCSD and UCD have always been the same in my eyes. They were both ranked #8 publicly last year. Rankings are completely worthless anyways. The entire UC system is very good and that’s all that really matters.</p>
<p>But employers realize there’s a difference between a Berkeley and a Merced grad, regardless of the reputation of the UC system.</p>
<p>And within tiers, rankings don’t matter much. The only time they make an impact is when hard cut-offs are used (e.g., recruiting purposes). McKinsey recruits at USNEWS Top-25, for example, meaning that UCSD undergraduates are out of luck.</p>
<p>My point being the OP using a few select rankings to guage and determine the overall quality of a university is just ludicrous. UCSD is still a top tier UC and top tier public school.</p>
<p>I don’t know if you’re aware of this, but a few years back, the top 3 UCs (Berkeley, LA, SD) were far ahead of the next three (Irvine, Davis, SB) in the USNEWS ranking. Over the past 4 years or so, Berkeley and LA have maintained their position around the T20-T25 while UCSD has been falling slowly while the mid-3 have been slowly creeping up in rankings.</p>
<p>I agree in that this doesn’t really matter too much practically, but in terms of changes in perception (especially to prospective undergraduates selecting colleges), it does.</p>
<p>For those who worry about Irvine, Davis, SB are creeping up in rankings in the USNews, have you looked into what particular metrics improved in those schools? Are those metrics important?</p>
<p>I too am interested in what metrics UCSD has weakened at according to USnews. If its is any of the money related metrics, I think we should be fine in the future since our new chancellor has a pretty good track record at raising money at CMU. He also apparently has a strong “business sense”.</p>
<p>If he can actually raise our endowments into the billions like he expects to, I am sure we will move up in the rankings over the years.</p>
<p>this is really off topic,. but what’s the deal with Ivy leagues… Id the education style much better than other colleges? Or do they just have better facilities there to help students understand the concepts more easily?</p>
<p>It’s part better resources and part signaling. </p>
<p>There’s also an endogeneity problem in trying to figure out why students from Ivys and other top schools tend to do better in the long run since, on average, the best high school students tend to go to the best colleges and universities.</p>
<p>Now that I’ve gotten a taste of both a public school education (UCSD for undergrad) and a private school education (graduate school), there isn’t much difference in curriculum or education style. The premium in going to these schools is that you’ll get more opportunities than you would at other schools.</p>
<p>Goddamn, now I have to revise my resume to reflect the rankings change…</p>
<p>University of California, San Diego [#38 :’( Q_Q]</p>
<p>I certainly agree that rankings matter for people aiming for tippy-top jobs at well-known firms, but prospective UCSD students will likely not have any alternatives that place much better. For the vast majority of students, academic performance will be the limiting factor.</p>
<p>Well of course that’s the general assumption behind rankings–all else equal (e.g., cost of attendance), go to the ‘best’ school you got into.</p>
<p>However, once you have to start making trade-offs between schools (e.g., post-graduate opportunities, cost of attendance, location, etc.) then that’s where you may or may not go to the top-ranked school on this–or any other–list. </p>
<p>For those people who do have UCSD in a consideration set, this ranking may be informative as to how our school is viewed by the general population relative to other schools–weighting certain criterion. If that criterion represents more or less what you value in a school (look at USNEWS’ ranking methodology to get a sense as to how their weight different aspects), then the ranking may be meaningful to you. If not, then don’t pay much attention to them.</p>
<p>In my experience, they do reflect the general perspective of top employers and graduate/professional schools. If you want to work in Wall Street, for example, UCSD may be a limiting factor since no IB firms recruit here.</p>