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by commonlisp94
1065 days ago
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Indeed, but not without tradeoffs, including: - accepting fewer students (having strict requirements). - failing students out in early classes (fewer opportunities to retake classes). - more professionally focused and shorter curriculum. - less class and subject choices - the degree commanding significantly less earnings For whatever reason, the best students seem to end up at a few top European schools (like Oxford) or go to the US. |
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At the undergrad level, the subject matter is generally very well-established. But when you want a job after graduation, being close friends with the CEO's child helps far more than a few tenths of a point on your GPA.
Legacy admissions and nepotism are still very much a thing.