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Komin
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| Posted: Mon Nov 28, 2005 7:34 am
Post subject: Re: best chinese MBA programs |
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If you are asian students , stick to America , and don' t go to the
UK.
That is why there is a drop in the number of Chinese Students going to
the UK for universities .
Asian students have better chances at American or Canadaian
Universities .
UK always exhibits the past and the UK always stays in the past , like
racial discriminations , just like the Commonwealth , it is the racial
discriminations which killed the British Commnowealth .
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PAT-RIK
Guest
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| Posted: Mon Nov 28, 2005 8:35 pm
Post subject: Re: best chinese MBA programs |
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Harvard: 1998 - 2005 - 6 Nobel winners
Cambridge: 1998 - 2005 - 9 Nobel winners
Oxford: 1998 -2005 - 8 Nobel winners |
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Ira Humperdink MD
Guest
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| Posted: Mon Nov 28, 2005 11:38 pm
Post subject: Re: best chinese MBA programs |
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| Quote: | Cambridge: 1998 - 2005 - 9 Nobel winners
Oxford: 1998 -2005 - 8 Nobel winners
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read the fine print, buddy. Those 17 nobel prize winners all did their
original research 20-40 years ago, BEFORE 1980. After 1980s, its all
silicon valley, ebay, yahoo, Stanford.
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PAT-RIK
Guest
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| Posted: Tue Nov 29, 2005 1:59 am
Post subject: Re: best chinese MBA programs |
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Yeah right. And all those American winners did their research in before
1980 too. You failed to american universities where any better then
those from UK. Maybe in 10 years from now. |
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Ira Humperdink MD
Guest
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| Posted: Tue Nov 29, 2005 2:31 am
Post subject: Re: best chinese MBA programs |
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given a chioce between living in sunny stanford compared to dreary
ox-cam, which young aspiring nobel prize winner would choose go to
england???? |
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PAT-RIK
Guest
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| Posted: Wed Nov 30, 2005 12:31 am
Post subject: Re: best chinese MBA programs |
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Well, I think that people like me and you like have party on a sunny
beach, but people like aspring nobel prize winner like to stay in
dreary library of ox-cam. But I agree with you, it's just that at the
moment University of Cambridge is not that bad, but could happen later. |
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Ira Humperdink MD
Guest
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| Posted: Wed Nov 30, 2005 3:24 am
Post subject: Re: best chinese MBA programs |
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| Quote: | But I agree with you, it's just that at the moment University of Cambridge is not that bad, but could happen later.
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yes, but rankings are competitive, and the University of arizona are
not that
bad either. What makes you think ox-cam is better than arizona just
because ox-cam is older?
arizona won some recent nobel prizes. |
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PAT-RIK
Guest
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| Posted: Wed Nov 30, 2005 8:06 am
Post subject: Re: best chinese MBA programs |
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Well, this is the punch line:
Briliant students that want to be Nobel prize holders will go to
Harward and Stanford because they like sunny beach and great education
and they love America and all that comes with it.
Very bad lausy students that could not make it to Stanford or other
great American schools (like Arizona) will be so unlucky and they will
go to schools like University of Oxford and Cambridge University.
After few years of education: University of Oxford or Cambridge
University will turn more nobel prize winners out of lausy students
than Harward and Stanford out of brilliant students.
Don't get me wrong. I love America. And I would love to be a Princeton
graduate. :-)
Harvard: 1998 - 2005 - 6 Nobel winners
Cambridge: 1998 - 2005 - 9 Nobel winners
Oxford: 1998 -2005 - 8 Nobel |
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UTSimo9
Guest
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| Posted: Wed Dec 07, 2005 2:37 am
Post subject: Re: Florida, Texas, Washington finally get some respect |
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Darccity ha scritto:
| Quote: | UF was there five years ago. The irony of USNews' ranking system is that
UF
made it back into the top fifty (tied with some second rate UC campus at
49th)
by gutting the quality of its undergrad education, the ostensible basis
for
these rankings! Professors have been granted carte blanche by the
legislature
to ignore undergrads there in favor of their research and graduate program
agendas. Slashing its percentage of undergrads makes UF more selective in
admissions measures. Funds redirected to research rather than teaching
elevates UF's academic rating in USN&WR.
The other critical point is that most of the state universities that
make
it into the top fifty are residence rather than commuter schools.
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UCLA, Texas, Washington, Georgia Tech are largely commuter schools but they
are in the top 50.
| Quote: | The heavy
weight by USN&WR to graduation rate prevents the latter universities (with
their non-trad and part-time student populations) from achieving valid
rankings. USNew needs a separate ranking for these schools (located where
most
of the population is). If I have time, I'll try to construct one for this
newsgroup.
U.S. News finally put these schools in the top tier! This is something
long
overdue! All three are quality institutions who will only rise more with
the "1st tier" classification. |
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merlepaulines
Guest
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| Posted: Tue Dec 13, 2005 1:02 am
Post subject: Re: http://www.kisschat.co.uk a cool& fun new online chatroo |
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| Hi all, |
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flintstonephilly
Joined: 14 May 2008
Posts: 1
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| Posted: Wed May 14, 2008 5:57 pm
Post subject: |
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I've seen and heard many responses to the question "Is DeVry a good school or a bad school to attend". Frankly, I have to say I’m not surprised at many of the negative responses from people who have never attended DeVry, never graduated from DeVry or failed out of DeVry. I graduated from DeVry with a Bachelors of Science in Networking Communications Management and I have to say that I’ve not experienced the negative opinions that have been expressed. DeVry is more expensive that most state colleges, but amongst other private universities, DeVry is very reasonable. $56K to $60K is a low average for private universities. With the exception of the large Ivy League College such as Harvard, MIT, Stanford and Yale, many of the other private universities throughout the U.S. range from $60K to $100K for an undergraduate degree. I’ve also known several DeVry graduates in Cities such as Dallas, Houston and Fort Worth, TX; Kansas City, MO; Orlando, Ft. Lauderdale and Miami, FL ,who have graduated from DeVry with various degrees and have had much success in their careers. One of them living in Houston, TX is currently earning six figures.
The rumor that DeVry’s credits don’t transfer is a myth. I transferred 79 of 88 credits from DeVry into Kansas State University’s Bachelors Degree program in CIS in the 2001 when I had to move there for one year. And I was able to transfer KSU credits back to DeVry to finish up my degree.
The rumor that companies don’t respect DeVry graduates is also untrue. Companies such as Sprint, Verizon, Bell South, MCI, IBM. Hewlett-Packard, FedEx, UPS, Motorola and more have hired a large number of DeVry’s graduates over the years and from what I hear, they are still showing up a DeVry Job Fairs.
The rumor that DeVry’s curriculum is of low quality is also unsubstantiated. Many of the professors at DeVry hold PhDs; all hold at least a Masters Degree and most has 10 or more years of experience in the field that they are teaching. The curriculum is also monitored by the North Central Association, the regionally accrediting body. The same accrediting body for the University of Illinois, University of Michigan and the University of Kansas.
In response to the comments about DeVry's television commercials, I too think they can be a little discrediting and cheesy. However, they are a private for Profit university that operates like a business and in business, if you don't get your name out there you don't servive. Take for example Honda, they still have lots of TV commercials and they are still considered one of the best cars to buy. Advertisment does not equal poor quality. |
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