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Most Popular Safety Schools In The Country

Started by Not A Serious Person, November 16, 2019, 11:40:36 AM

Previous topic - Next topic

Not A Serious Person

What do you think of this list?

https://www.ranker.com/crowdranked-list/the-best-safety-schools-college-fallback-options

1 University of Colorado Boulder 
2 University of Vermont
3 George Washington University
4 James Madison University
5 Pennsylvania State University
6 Occidental College
7 Virginia Polytechnic Institute
8 University of Massachusetts Amherst
9 Lewis & Clark College
10 UNC/Asheville
11 Marquette University
12 Skidmore College
13 The University of Texas at Austin
14 University of California, Irvine
15 Tulane University
16 University of California, Santa Cruz
17 George Mason University
18 Texas Tech University
19 Fordham University
20 American University
Western Progressives have one worldview, the correct one.

Cheeks

Quote from: Heisenberg v2.0 on November 16, 2019, 11:40:36 AM
What do you think of this list?

https://www.ranker.com/crowdranked-list/the-best-safety-schools-college-fallback-options

1 University of Colorado Boulder 
2 University of Vermont
3 George Washington University
4 James Madison University
5 Pennsylvania State University
6 Occidental College
7 Virginia Polytechnic Institute
8 University of Massachusetts Amherst
9 Lewis & Clark College
10 UNC/Asheville
11 Marquette University
12 Skidmore College
13 The University of Texas at Austin
14 University of California, Irvine
15 Tulane University
16 University of California, Santa Cruz
17 George Mason University
18 Texas Tech University
19 Fordham University
20 American University

UC Irvine is rated top 50 in the nation as is Tulane and Texas.  Interesting list.
"I hate everything about this job except the games, Everything. I don't even get affected anymore by the winning, by the ratings, those things. The trouble is, it will sound like an excuse because we've never won the national championship, but winning just isn't all that important to me." Al McGuire

#UnleashSean

This should be a nice discussion on scoop


But it's 2019, safety schools? Lol

ChitownSpaceForRent

I think this generalizes too much, it all depends on the program.

If I didn't get into Northwestern or the Marquette PT program, Illinois was my "safety school"

I guess if everything went horribly, horribly wrong then yea, Marquette's general admission would have ended up being my safety.

tower912

Surprised to see Marquette there, as I cannot remember the last Marquette safety to make the NFL.
Luke 6:45   ...A good man produces goodness from the good in his heart; an evil man produces evil out of his store of evil.   Each man speaks from his heart's abundance...

It is better to be fearless and cheerful than cheerless and fearful.

Not A Serious Person

Quote from: tower912 on November 16, 2019, 02:06:31 PM
Surprised to see Marquette there, as I cannot remember the last Marquette safety to make the NFL.

Artie Green
Western Progressives have one worldview, the correct one.

ZiggysFryBoy


D'Lo Brown

Those are all quality schools, I don't see why Marquette should be ashamed to be on such a list.

warriorchick

It's a crowd-sourced list.  It's meaningless.
Have some patience, FFS.

JWags85

UT-Austin is quite difficult to get into, especially out of state. I know kids that went to Virginia and Wash U who didn't get into UT.

And Occidental College is less than 2000 kids. That's enough to already know this list sucks.

Not A Serious Person

Quote from: The Hamberdler on November 16, 2019, 03:41:18 PM
Those are all quality schools, I don't see why Marquette should be ashamed to be on such a list.

I completely agree. 

Safety school means that after the select "reach schools" (Ivies, Stanford, Duke, Chicago, Hopkins, Northwestern, etc), the country views these schools as very desirable.  It also means the school has a national reputation.

If you are not in the top 20 of US news rankings (to cite one benchmark), this is a good list to be on.
Western Progressives have one worldview, the correct one.

MU Fan in Connecticut

We just took my younger daughter to visit UVM for an open house last weekend, but it's not her safety school.

GooooMarquette

As others have alluded, being crowdsourced, I suspect kids who listed some of the really good schools were shooting even higher based on their grades and SATs. For example, kids who listed UC-Irvine might have had places like Stanford, UC-Berkeley or UCLA as their target schools. And I wouldn't be surprised if those who listed MU were shooting for places like Northwestern, WashU, and similar schools.

The headline is all about the ciicks....

Billy Hoyle

#13
Quote from: The Hamberdler on November 16, 2019, 03:41:18 PM
Those are all quality schools, I don't see why Marquette should be ashamed to be on such a list.

pretty much all of them (except for the Liberal Arts schools) are ranked in the first tier for US News.  It's like it's a list made up of schools like UWM, Eastern Illinois, Louisville and Chico State on which MU is included.

CU was actually my dream school, until made dad figured out I wanted to go there to just ski and hike (like most students there).  A girl who didn't get into Texas sued all the way to the SCOTUS to get in there, so I don't know how it's a "safety school" unless the top choice for applicants is Rice.
"You either smoke or you get smoked. And you got smoked."

Coleman

These are all great schools. No shame in being on this list. Yeah, if we are a "safety school" for Harvard, University of Chicago, or Stanford...fine by me. Never had any illusion of being in that tier.

The Hippie Satan of Hyperbole

Quote from: Billy Hoyle on November 18, 2019, 11:11:52 AM
pretty much all of them (except for the Liberal Arts schools) are ranked in the first tier for US News.  It's like it's a list made up of schools like UWM, Eastern Illinois, Louisville and Chico State on which MU is included.

CU was actually my dream school, until made dad figured out I wanted to go there to just ski and hike (like most students there).  A girl who didn't get into Texas sued all the way to the SCOTUS to get in there, so I don't know how it's a "safety school" unless the top choice for applicants is Rice.


UT Austin is like UW Madison.  It's the target school for a lot of especially instate students, but will be more of a "safety school" for some looking from out of state.
Matthew 25:40: Truly I tell you, whatever you did for one of the least of these brothers and sisters of mine, you did for me.

Silkk the Shaka

MU & VPI in the top 11, TAMU nowhere to be found. Buzz made a major trade down, SMDH

TAMU, Knower of Ball

Quote from: Goose on January 15, 2023, 08:43:46 PM
TAMU

I do know, Newsie is right on you knowing ball.


rocket surgeon

  rest assured all you st norbie rejects, help is on the way
felz Houston ate uncle boozie's hands

GooooMarquette

Quote from: Billy Hoyle on November 18, 2019, 11:11:52 AM

CU was actually my dream school, until made dad figured out I wanted to go there to just ski and hike (like most students there).  A girl who didn't get into Texas sued all the way to the SCOTUS to get in there, so I don't know how it's a "safety school" unless the top choice for applicants is Rice.



Yep. A friend of mine went for CU for the much same reason. After graduating, she became a ski instructor in Vail for a couple of years before it was time to move on. Fortunately, she had studied enough between the skiing and hiking to get a good GPA, and she ended up in law school at Vanderbilt.

CU, like most big schools, is what you make of it. If you do enough work, you can find your way to a great future. If you don't, you may just get an expensive piece of paper for the wall.

Coleman

#20
I guess I can't identify with having a "dream school" or a "fallback."

I applied to MU and UW-Madison. Wasn't really thrilled about either initially, just was a pragmatic choice as I wanted to be close to my high school girlfriend (haha what an idiot I was!) who also applied to both and ended up going to Madison. I also got into both schools. I decided it was best to go to a different school than my gf, and if it was meant to be it would still work out 70 miles apart. We broke up summer after freshman year. Ended up marrying an MU gal. No regrets with my choice of MU, although my student loans would already be paid off if I went the other way...

StillAWarrior

Quote from: Billy Hoyle on November 18, 2019, 11:11:52 AM
CU was actually my dream school, until made dad figured out I wanted to go there to just ski and hike (like most students there).

There was often a third main attraction of CU...even when I was growing up in Colorado (i.e., before legalization was a thing).  The common saying was always, "CU:  Nine months in Boulder, three months in rehab."
Never wrestle with a pig.  You both get dirty, and the pig likes it.

muwarrior69

The quality of education at Princeton, Harvard or Yale at the under graduate  level is no different than the education at Marquette. However having an Ivy undergrad education will open more doors.

Eldon

Quote from: muwarrior69 on November 19, 2019, 01:21:27 PM
The quality of education at Princeton, Harvard or Yale at the under graduate  level is no different than the education at Marquette. However having an Ivy undergrad education will open more doors.

MU is a solid school but that first sentence is false.

JWags85

Quote from: StillAWarrior on November 19, 2019, 10:56:11 AM
There was often a third main attraction of CU...even when I was growing up in Colorado (i.e., before legalization was a thing).  The common saying was always, "CU:  Nine months in Boulder, three months in rehab."

CU is such a unique place.  My girlfriend from freshman year of college transferred back home there, so I spent a good amount of time over the next 6-8 months there.  I'm wasnt an avid fan of "herbal supplements" nor was I much for the crunchy granola pseudo hippie vibe Boulder can be known for.  I love to ski but otherwise not a huge outdoors (camping, hiking) sort of person.  That being said, it had a magnetism that I was obsessed with.  It is eclectic, and laid back, and diverse.  Good academics, a gorgeous campus, Folsom is an amazing venue, and close to Denver.  I was in love with where I went to school and couldn't leave, but if I was even remotely unhappy, I may have transferred after visit #2.