1997-01-29 - Re: Best Computer School?

Header Data

From: Declan McCullagh <declan@pathfinder.com>
To: Rick Osborne <osborne@gateway.grumman.com>
Message Hash: 3de2eb3b6d13e91476c4d198072fb1b974967aa32691680e5d9ea24704eefe5f
Message ID: <199701290656.WAA21795@toad.com>
Reply To: N/A
UTC Datetime: 1997-01-29 06:56:19 UTC
Raw Date: Tue, 28 Jan 1997 22:56:19 -0800 (PST)

Raw message

From: Declan McCullagh <declan@pathfinder.com>
Date: Tue, 28 Jan 1997 22:56:19 -0800 (PST)
To: Rick Osborne <osborne@gateway.grumman.com>
Subject: Re: Best Computer School?
Message-ID: <199701290656.WAA21795@toad.com>
MIME-Version: 1.0
Content-Type: text/plain


MIT probably has a need-blind admissions policy; they don't care whether or
not you have money. When they admit you, at least.

Let me plug Carnegie Mellon University, which consistently ties with MIT
and one of them California schools for first place in computer science.
It's not quite as hard to get into as MIT, though you do have to deal with
Pittsburgh winters. The town itself is small enough to be friendly, and big
enough to be interesting. Jim Morris, the head of the computer science
department, was my instructor for a data structures class and truly seemed
to care about his students' well-being.

Oh, and I remember we had t-shirts saying: "MIT -- the CMU of Massachusetts."

-Declan


Rick wrote:

>At 12:32 PM 1/28/97 -0500, Derek Atkins wrote:
>>This is really exagerating.  You do not need a 4.0, 1600, etc. to be
>>admitted to MIT.  Sure, you need good grades, but a 3.6 average and
>>1350-1400 SAT scores is perfectly adequate to be admitted to MIT.
>
>I disagree and can speak from experience.  I was denied admission to MIT
>even thought I had a 3.82 GPA, 1440 SAT (one try), and had taken 9 AP tests
>with two 5's, four 4's, two 3's, and one 2.  As for being well-rounded, I
>was on several academic teams, sang in Chorus, acted and stage managed in
>Drama, and played Tennis.
>
>The only thing I didn't have that the next MIT applicant had was money.  I
>made the mistake of letting them know that I was dirt poor and would need
>full aid/grants/etc, and to quote "The Great Escape" it was "Zzzt! To the
>Russian front!"
>
>>For what it's worth, I wanted to go to MIT my sophomore year in high
>>school, too
>
>Lucky you.  It had been a dream of mine since I was an annoying
>overachiever of 6.  Sux to be white trash, I guess.
>
>MIT may be a great school, but they tend to be snooty assholes for the most
>part.  (DISCLAIMER: Not all MIT grads/attendees are necessarily "snooty
>assholes", I'm just saying that I've yet to meet one that wasn't.)
>_________ o s b o r n e @ g a t e w a y . g r u m m a n . c o m _________
>"He who knows, does not speak.
>He who speaks, does not know."



-------------------------
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The Netly News Network
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