ND's Academic Reputation

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Pachuco

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IMO, he's Stanford's if they want him.

If you are (1) a kicker, (2) academically serious, and (3) not Catholic, you go with Stanford or Duke. Northwestern, Notre Dame, and Vanderbilt are your back-ups.

Unless you follow your own path and are heavily into football (especially regarding tradition and game day environment/atmosphere).
 

PerthDomer

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I'd lump Duke with ND NW Vandy. They're not close to Stanford in selectivity or job placement.
 

Whiskeyjack

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IMO, he's Stanford's if they want him.

If you are (1) a kicker, (2) academically serious, and (3) not Catholic, you go with Stanford or Duke. Northwestern, Notre Dame, and Vanderbilt are your back-ups.

Not so fast, my friend. You have a point with Stanford, but Duke is not significantly better than ND for undergrad. In fact, they're close enough that I'd give ND the nod 9/10 just due to tradition, exposure, etc.

I'd lump Duke with ND NW Vandy. They're not close to Stanford in selectivity or job placement.

SU > Duke = ND >> Vandy >> NW

Hope he decides soon, although I'm afraid he acts a buffoon and ends up at Stanford because of the poon.

The female talent at SU is abysmal. ND is miles better in that regard, though I highly doubt Yoon will be deciding on that basis.
 

PerthDomer

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To be fair in terms of prestige/job placement it's Furd>>>Duke>ND=NW>Vandy. I actually never knew a kid at ND who also got into Stanford. It's pretty rare for a kid to turn that down academically. OTOH football is a diff question.
 

Whiskeyjack

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To be fair in terms of prestige/job placement it's Furd>>>Duke>ND=NW>Vandy.

Where are you getting this stuff from? Your purely anecdotal experience? Because based on degree value, there's very little daylight between Duke and ND, and NW is a long way behind both.
 
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Me2SouthBend

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Where are you getting this stuff from? Your purely anecdotal experience? Because based on degree value, there's very little daylight between Duke and ND, and NW is a long way behind both.

There you go mucking up a good argument w facts. The nerve of some people.
 

PerthDomer

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Where are you getting this stuff from? Your purely anecdotal experience? Because based on degree value, there's very little daylight between Duke and ND, and NW is a long way behind both.

Because I know people who went to those schools and people working in competitive industries like finance. Duke places into Wall Street better, and sticks kids into better grad schools. You'd be outright laughed at for suggesting ND over NW to a NW person based on future career but they're a tad elitist.
 

Whiskeyjack

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Because I know people who went to those schools and people working in competitive industries like finance. Duke places into Wall Street better, and sticks kids into better grad schools. You'd be outright laughed at for suggesting ND over NW to a NW person based on future career but they're a tad elitist.

That's what we call "anecdotal evidence". You know a few people. That's not very useful in making broad generalizations about schools and career prospects. I'm basing my argument on objective salary data gathered from thousands of graduates by PayScale.

"Business" includes a whole lot of career paths outside of Finance. Mendoza does a fabulous job of placing its graduates at top consulting and accounting firms, for instance. But because ND doesn't offer the same pipeline to Wall Street that Harvard or Wharton do, we're apparently "not elite". That's narrow-minded bullshit.
 
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Bogtrotter07

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That's what we call "anecdotal evidence". You know a few people. That's not very useful in making broad generalizations about schools and career prospects. I'm basing my argument on objective salary data gathered from thousands of graduates by PayScale.

"Business" includes a whole lot of career paths outside of Finance. Mendoza does a fabulous job of placing its graduates at top consulting and accounting firms, for instance. But because ND doesn't offer the same pipeline to Wall Street that Harvard or Wharton do, we're apparently "not elite". That's narrow-minded bullshit.

Kickin' da cash!
 

Domina Nostra

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That's what we call "anecdotal evidence". You know a few people. That's not very useful in making broad generalizations about schools and career prospects. I'm basing my argument on objective salary data gathered from thousands of graduates by PayScale.

"Business" includes a whole lot of career paths outside of Finance. Mendoza does a fabulous job of placing its graduates at top consulting and accounting firms, for instance. But because ND doesn't offer the same pipeline to Wall Street that Harvard or Wharton do, we're apparently "not elite". That's narrow-minded bullshit.

Anecdotal? If you have relevant experience and you relay it, I'm not sure it can be just dismissed as anecdotal. Is it any better to take a particular student and say what they can expect based on a broad statistic that captures tons of different people in completely different situations?

You don't have to worry about the open-minded folks, you have to worry about the close-minded folks. The close-minded folks hold a lot of power, and one of the ways they do it is to insist that people with their special credentials are superior. If you don't think there is a pecking order in terms of colleges in finance, law, medicine, academics, and lots of other prestigious fields, you are fooling yourself. Why do you think ND is bending over backwards to stay relevant to U.S. News? They want to be associated with the elite schools because it has real benefits.

Sure, you can succeed without those degrees, but it sure makes things easier, for better of for worse, in a lot of high paying fields.
 
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Whiskeyjack

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Anecdotal? If you have relevant experience and you relay it, I'm not sure it can be just dismissed as anecdotal. Is it any better to take a particular student and say what they can expect based on a broad statistic that captures tons of different people in completely different situations?

Yes. Objective data gathered from thousands of alumni is going to be much more reliable than the anecdotal evidence of a few people. Whether or not that data has much predictive power regarding any specific individual is obviously going to depend on a lot of other factors.

If you don't think there is a pecking order in terms of colleges in finance, law, medicine, academics, and lots of other prestigious fields, you are fooling yourself.

I never argued otherwise. Rather, I don't believe that the following proposition-- "Duke is better at placing it's Finance majors in Wall Street firms"-- is sufficient, even if true, to support the claim that Duke > ND for undergrad. The objective salary data doesn't bear that out.

Why do you think ND is bending over backwards to stay relevant to U.S. News? They want to be associated with the elite schools because it has real benefits.

ND is an elite academic institution. I'm boggled that Duke is held in Ivy-like esteem, yet ND is presumed to be a middling Midwestern institution like NW.
 
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Domina Nostra

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(1) Yes. Objective data gathered from thousands of alumni is going to be much more reliable than the anecdotal evidence of a few people. Whether or not that data has much predictive power regarding any specific individual is obviously going to depend on a lot of other factors.

(2) I never argued otherwise. Rather, I don't believe that the following proposition-- "Duke is better at placing it's Finance majors in Wall Street firms"-- is sufficient, even if true, to support the claim that Duke > ND for undergrad. The objective salary data doesn't bear that out.

(3) As far as quality of undergraduate eduacation, I would probably agree with you, although I am not sure how much I think that translates to anything outside of sciences. But I don't think that is what the school's name does for you. I think employer's say that this is an elite applicant when they see an elite college on your resume.[/I]

ND is an elite academic institution. I'm boggled that Duke is held in Ivy-like esteem, yet ND is presumed to be a middling Midwestern institution like NW.

(1) I would argue that the anecdotal evidene is widespread enough that it has predictive power. Everyone agrees that Harvard and Stanford carry more weight than an ND degree. I think many feel the same way about Duke.

(2) Fair enough. All I'm saying is that if all other things are equal and you are going to walk into an interview as a Duke or ND grad, I think people would assume you were a more elite student for having gone to Duke. ND's network and reputation, though, are excellent.

(3) To me, saying Notre Dame is elite is like saying the top 25 football teams are elite. Harvard, Yale, Stanford, and Princeton are elite. There are a bunch of schools that can make a good argument that they are almost there, and Duke is one of those. ND is a clear step down, with Vanderbilt, Northwestern and others.

What makes (or made) ND special was its blend of excellent academics, Catholicism, its blue-collar feel, and its hyper-devoted alumni. It was never right up there with Harvard.
 
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irish1958

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Anecdotal evidence is an informal account of evidence in the form of an anecdote. The term is often used in contrast to scientific evidence, as evidence that cannot be investigated using the scientific method. The problem with arguing based on anecdotal evidence is that anecdotal evidence is not necessarily typical; only statistical evidence can determine how typical something is. Misuse of anecdotal evidence is an informal fallacy.
Source Wikipedia
 
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PerthDomer

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I'm talking about friends at Ibanking firms who say they conduct interviews at UPenn, UVA, UMich and it's hard to get in as a domer. I'm talking about most of my business friends who say it's a joke we keep getting the Bweek #1 thing because we rate that we're super happy. ND is a great school, but there's a pecking order and we're behind quite a few schools.

Also, something the ND admin has been working on is getting students into grad school. When you do a PHD you choose to make less in a lot of cases, and a lot of these schools churn out way more PHD kids than ND does.
 

jimmymac

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I'm talking about friends at Ibanking firms who say they conduct interviews at UPenn, UVA, UMich and it's hard to get in as a domer. I'm talking about most of my business friends who say it's a joke we keep getting the Bweek #1 thing because we rate that we're super happy. ND is a great school, but there's a pecking order and we're behind quite a few schools.

Also, something the ND admin has been working on is getting students into grad school. When you do a PHD you choose to make less in a lot of cases, and a lot of these schools churn out way more PHD kids than ND does.

Youre wrong. I'm in NYC right now. I think at least 50 domers get banking each year, which is insanely high. I can name 15 good friends of mine who are bankers. Also, the BAML CEO is a ND grad as of this year, and this year the NY office has 10 banking summers, the most of any school.
 

Domina Nostra

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Anecdotal evidence is an informal account of evidence in the form of an anecdote. The term is often used in contrast to scientific evidence, as evidence that cannot be investigated using the scientific method. The problem with arguing based on anecdotal evidence is that anecdotal evidence is not necessarily typical; only statistical evidence can determine how typical something is. Misuse of anecdotal evidence is an informal fallacy.
Source Wikipedia

Misuse!

Misuse of statistical evidence is also, obviously, a fallacy.

You can't quantify reputation. You just have to get a feel for it from experience. As noted above, there is a pecking order, and it's my impression, which correspond with US News' rankings, that Duke is ahead of Notre Dame by a good bit.

Notre Dame's alumni network, though, is legendary. Also, ND is attracting more top kids.

Don't get me wrong. It's considered a great school. It's just not Stanford reputation-wise, or in my opinion, Duke. I think the US news rankings reflect the perception pretty well.
 
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Domina Nostra

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Youre wrong. I'm in NYC right now. I think at least 50 domers get banking each year, which is insanely high. I can name 15 good friends of mine who are bankers. Also, the BAML CEO is a ND grad as of this year, and this year the NY office has 10 banking summers, the most of any school.

ND is ahead of Wharton in those rankings. Do you really think ND grads are looked on more highly than Wharton grads?
 

Rack Em

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Can we take the Mendoza butthole licking to another thread gents? The school isn't as good as it thinks it is and this is a recruit's thread.

As I type this I find it funny that I'm making this request because usually I get threads off track.
 

Whiskeyjack

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(1) I would argue that the anecdotal evidence is widespread enough that it has predictive power.

I agree. Properly-designed opinion polls are scientific enough to predict all sorts of outcomes that rest on inherently subjective factors.

Everyone agrees that Harvard and Stanford carry more weight than an ND degree.

No argument there.

I think many feel the same way about Duke.

Where's your evidence for this? Because the objective degree value data directly contradicts it.

(2) Fair enough. All I'm saying is that if all other things are equal and you are going to walk into an interview as a Duke or ND grad, I think people would assume you were a more elite student for having gone to Duke.

Again, this is simple assertion on your part. Where's your evidence for this? We've discussed here many times why the methodology behind USN&WR's ranking is clownshoes, and how it undervalues ND specifically.

(3) To me, saying Notre Dame is elite is like saying the top 25 football teams are elite. Harvard, Yale, Stanford, and Princeton are elite.

This is just semantics.

ND is a clear step down, with Vanderbilt, Northwestern and others.

Check out Payscale's most recent College ROI ranking. Disregarding the engineering schools, ND is close behind Stanford and Harvard, but ahead of Princeton, Yale, Duke and a whole bunch of other schools that you think are obviously more elite than ND. Which raises the question of what is considered elite? Because here we have a broad data set clearly indicating that ND grads are getting some very high paying jobs right out of school, yet I'm supposed to disregard this objective evidence in favor of hand-waving about what "everyone" knows to be true? A lot of influential hiring managers apparently haven't gotten the memo that ND isn't elite.

I'm talking about friends at Ibanking firms who say they conduct interviews at UPenn, UVA, UMich and it's hard to get in as a domer.

First, I apologize for my rude reply yesterday. I just get frustrated that I have to keep having this argument with other Irish fans. Please see above for why I don't think this very small data set of anecdotal evidence is reliable. Jimmymac provided some anecdotal evidence of his own that directly contradicts it.

Also, something the ND admin has been working on is getting students into grad school. When you do a PHD you choose to make less in a lot of cases, and a lot of these schools churn out way more PHD kids than ND does.

That's an excellent point. We're talking about the reputation of undergraduate degrees here. And a lot of people confuse the quality of a large research university's graduate programs with its undergraduate education-- Michigan and UNC are prime examples. If anything, that supports my argument that, as an undergraduate institution, ND is much more elite than you seem to be giving it credit for.

You can't quantify reputation.

Sure you can.

As noted above, there is a pecking order, and it's my impression, which correspond with US News' rankings, that Duke is ahead of Notre Dame by a good bit.

(1) Do we need to go into why the USN&WR ranking sucks?
(2) Why credit USN&WR over the Payscale data?

ND is ahead of Wharton in those rankings. Do you really think ND grads are looked on more highly than Wharton grads?

Apparently, yes. The Businessweek ranking and the Payscale data indicate that ND grads are getting better jobs.
 
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IrishLax

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Follow the test scores/GPAs.

ND has students that measure up very favorably to all of the Ivies that aren't the Big 3. They also compare favorably to Duke. They DO NOT compare favorably with Stanford.

Perception is a funny thing. Growing up on the east coast (and quasi-southeast) I always thought Duke was as good as Stanford. That's not close to true in all actuality. Then you go to the Midwest and you meet people who aren't even aware that Duke has good academics and think Northwestern or Chicago is God's gift to academia.

In general, people are ill-informed. I'm no different. But I can tell you that just about every finance major I knew with a good GPA who deserved a shot at investment banking got it... even in a HORRIBLE recession. I also have a ton of friends who graduated from the commerce school at UVA which is awesome and got a shot. It's very hard to compare/contrast anecdotes.

The truth is that on objective measures in those USN&WR rankings ND is a top 10ish or top 15ish for undergrad every year. When you factor in subjective measures, that's how ND gets slotted near the bottom of the top 20.

So ND has students comparable or better objectively than just about every school being discussed here (obviously not the Tier 1A) and other great characteristics... but then gives up ground in the "peer review"... is it any surprise that in this discussion among "peers" that we see something similar reflected? With many people expressing their subjective or anecdotal opinion that ND is inferior to XYZ? Just the way the world works. They say perception is reality.
 

Emcee77

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Perception is a funny thing. Growing up on the east coast (and quasi-southeast) I always thought Duke was as good as Stanford. That's not close to true in all actuality. Then you go to the Midwest and you meet people who aren't even aware that Duke has good academics and think Northwestern or Chicago is God's gift to academia.

It's very hard to compare/contrast anecdotes.

Totally. Great, great point.

I grew up in Virginia, and people around me in high school COULD NOT understand why I would go to ND instead of Georgetown. Like, after I made my decision known, people would pull me aside and try to figure out who was forcing me to go to ND. I'm not kidding, even teachers. The perception was that it just isn't as good a school. Now I live in Chicago, and the bias could not be more opposite.

I learned a valuable lesson from that ... don't trust general perception. Be sensitive to it, but don't trust it. I really appreciate Whiskey's impulse to look for objective data. If all you have is anecdotal evidence, you know nothing, Jon Snow.
 

Whiskeyjack

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I grew up in Virginia, and people around me in high school COULD NOT understand why I would go to ND instead of Georgetown.

I also turned down Georgetown for ND. We made a very wise decision. Georgetown has got virtually nothing going for it outside of its location.

If all you have is anecdotal evidence, you know nothing, Jon Snow.

For the mind is dark is full and errors.
 

irishog77

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RackEm politely asked me to lick Mendoza's butthole elsewhere. So here we are.

I'd normally encourage somebody to cease this very specific behavior altogether...but I kind of enjoy the back-and-forth and posts here. So, please, continue to lick away...
 

PerthDomer

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The business week rankings aren't taken very seriously. Anyone suggesting Mendoza>MIT/Wharton are fooling themselves.
 

Whiskeyjack

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The business week rankings aren't taken very seriously. Anyone suggesting Mendoza>MIT/Wharton are fooling themselves.

I wouldn't argue that Mendoza > MIT, because the degree value data doesn't support it (though it's unclear how much of that disparity is due to engineering v. business). But ND grads are making more straight out of a college than U Penn grads. Since Mendoza is generally accepted to be the most competitive of our undergraduate schools, I'd suggest that ND is offering at least a comparable business undergrad program to U Penn.

Again, I think there's some confusion over undergraduate v. graduate here. Wharton's is undoubtedly superior as a graduate institution, but I don't think they offer undergraduate degrees.
 
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