Top - Ranked College

By Dane Masters

Top School Graduate, Top Honors In Life!

If you're a high school junior or senior, you might be wondering how much of a difference going to a top ranked college really makes. Should you put in the extra time and effort to maintain a higher GPA so you'll be able to get into an elite school, or can you afford to back off a bit and enjoy what's supposed to be the best years of your life? After all, as long as you get a degree from somewhere, you'll be set. Right?

Despite this sort of thinking, most graduates fail to get good jobs with enticing salaries. Why is this so? It is because most well-known companies prefer to have as their employees, graduates from the Universities of Northwestern or Pennsylvania or Harvard. Graduates from mediocre colleges or unknown schools only rank second on their lists. So, the college or school does matter. The more elite, the better! Newspaper articles that claim, for example, MBA graduates drawing salaries of up to $100,000 a year, do not mention these facts. Hence, it is advisable that youngsters wishing to have a bright future work extra hard to get admission into a well-reputed school or college.

There are different sources with different ranking systems. It is they that decide which college stands first, which second, and so on. The rankings do not remain the same every year--they keep changing for various reasons. Sometimes, the college does not have enough funding resources; sometimes, they are unable to offer all the academic programs that students desire; and sometimes, the teaching faculty cannot cope with the complications of each course. At times, an institution loses its top ranking simply because it was not compatible with a particular system of ranking. However, each source does offer an explanation for the way they have ranked colleges. The college goer should peruse each explanation thoroughly and bear in mind why and how changes could take place. Only after that, a particular school or college should be opted for the purpose of further studies.

There is still an element of uncertainty when a student wants to opt for a particular college. General rankings are not enough to go by. One has to find out if that particular school or college is top where certain academic courses are concerned or top in overall rankings. For instance, a person wishing to pursue engineering studies would be better off going to MIT since it is the best in the field, rather than going to Yale which has an overall "best" rating. So unless the sophomore is uncertain about whether he will stick on with a particular course for the whole year or change midway, he/she would be well advised to go to only a school offering that particular discipline. The "uncertain" student may opt for the highest ranking college in general.

The next question would be, "where can you see the list of topmost colleges in the country"? Apart from the national magazine which contributes an entire issue to overall rankings of colleges, there are other places to search--books, the Internet, and annual school guides.

If the idea is to have a comfortable lifestyle in the future, then the time to work is during the high school years. A little effort and sacrifice will ensure that the coming years provide huge benefits.

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