These are very good small liberal arts schools...and there are others. There is not need to appropriate the "Ivy" designation as these schools are well reputed all on their own.
Go to the best state school within your state, e.g., Penn State, UVA, UNC, Clemson, UT, UMd, etc. I find very little correlation between success and school name. You will strongly regret running up 150k in student loan debt.
Student loan debt is a fact of life regardless of the institution. Unless one is an academic rock star or athlete of extraordinary ability in which full ride scholarships are obvious, loans are virtually unavoidable for most. The other option is community colleges for two years then transfer. And the name of the college on the degree at the end means very little in terms of success, if the one holding has no drive, flexibility, or work ethic and believes he or she is entitled to something simply because the piece paper in hand has a certain college name on it.
Just a click-bait not to be taken too seriously video. Yes these schools are good. But many others not talked about like the College of William & Mary are not mentioned.
At least this is a better collection of colleges than the other video about "Public Ivies"....there is literally noone who thinks the so called public ivies are on par with actual Ivies
These are very good small liberal arts schools...and there are others. There is not need to appropriate the "Ivy" designation as these schools are well reputed all on their own.
Learn how to pronounce the names of colleges before you do the video- Bowdoin is not that hard.
lol @ Sworeth-more and Lafaiette too!
I agree. His pronunciation was painful.
Hobart William Smith, Union, Pomona, Colgate, Franklin and Marshall, Gettysburg, University of the South to name a few
I would have replaced Trinity and Conn for Pomona and Claremont McKenna respectively...
That hideous purple...thing at 8:27 is not on the Wesleyan UNIVERSITY* campus
Case Western Reserve, Oberlin, Rice, Emory, Tulane and more
Tulane is very meh and rice is overrated
@@GoatOfMind Prove it.
NESCAC schools have the right balance between academics and athletics.
Washington and Lee University {W&L)
Go to the best state school within your state, e.g., Penn State, UVA, UNC, Clemson, UT, UMd, etc. I find very little correlation between success and school name. You will strongly regret running up 150k in student loan debt.
Unless you can scholarship your way in.
I think you meant to say you find little correlation between success and THESE state schools 😂 you mention.
Student loan
debt is a fact of life regardless of the institution. Unless one is an academic rock star or athlete of extraordinary ability in which full ride scholarships are obvious, loans are virtually unavoidable for most. The other option is community colleges for two years then transfer. And the name of the college on the degree at the end means very little in terms of success, if the one holding has no drive, flexibility, or work ethic and believes he or she is entitled to something simply because the piece paper in hand has a certain college name on it.
Just a click-bait not to be taken too seriously video.
Yes these schools are good. But many others not talked about like the College of William & Mary are not mentioned.
William and Mary belongs to the Pubilc Ivies.
Carleton College should be on this list
C'mon, Amherst, Williams, Wellesley. First tier.
Go Pards!!!
At least this is a better collection of colleges than the other video about "Public Ivies"....there is literally noone who thinks the so called public ivies are on par with actual Ivies
Pomona?
Smith…Mt. Holyoke…Wellesley?.. Come on!,,
7 sisters..