Many many people take the quiz, and for those who went to school and learned math, they know that numbers can round up and down. Jetpunk must do this since there are no decimal percentages, only whole numbers. The percent of ppl that get the hong kong could easily be something like 0.2%, which would round down to 0%. Just because it says 0% got it, doesn't mean no one actually got it. But then I could also be wrong and Jetpunk always puts atleast 1% if anyone at all gets it, but whatever.
When people make smarmy comments like “for those who went to school and learned maths,” I am always curious… are they saying that to make the person feel bad, or do they say it to make themselves feel better about themselves? Either way, it never fails to make them look like an obnoxious bore.
I typed in UCLA, not realizing it gave me the London school instead, so I missed UCLA, but I wouldn't have gotten the other one, so no difference in the score.
This is SO subjective, and pretty meaningless. Looks like if its famous, it's ranked. Whoopy-do. How can you possibly compare one university with another like this???
I wonder if the Sorbonne mostly teaches in French? This whole list seems to be of places that teach in English. The method they use to calculate the ranking, highly subjective as I suspected, is here.
A lot more people speak mandarin than french.. language is far from being the only determinant, but it does have an influence. Comparison of universities and the worth of their education are two different things, although some indicators are interesting.
These are mostly the name of the places the universities are in, rather than the full names of the universities. "Queensland" is the University of Queensland, commonly known as UQ, which didn't work so I assumed it wasn't on there. The same goes for UNSW for the University of New South Wales. They're far more commonly known by their abbreviations and even brand themselves like that.
Don't usually like to be "that commenter," but could we accept Beijing University? I recall that "beijing duck" was accepted for "peking duck" on another quiz. Also, I just tried it, and Wikipedia redirects "Beijing University" to the "Peking University" page.
Alternatively, feel free to tell me that the quiz already does accept "beijing," and I simply misspelled it like a dummy :)
Yes. His daughter went to Columbia. I think she considered going to the other ones mentioned, but maybe she wasn't accepted? I don't remember that part.
The University of California's flagship campus at Berkeley is referred to as both Berkeley (generally when discussing academics) and Cal (generally when discussing athletics, and, I think, by people from California).
You should accept NSW and UNSW for New South Wales. When neither of those worked, I moved on and never bothered typing the whole thing. The uni usually goes by the name UNSW.
Can't speak for Berkeley, but it's not unusual to consider the London colleges separately. For one thing, the largest colleges in Oxford and Cambridge have around 1,000 students, while UCL has around 42,000 and Imperial around 17,000. Ultimately the quiz is based on the QS rankings anyway, so it's wasn't Quizmaster's decision to separate them. I guess there's a case for a caveat, but it does say "according to Quacquarelli Symonds".
@coxbury. There's a reason that QS broke the data up the way it did. There's a major difference between a college at Oxford (a few hundred students) and a university such as UCLA or Berkeley (tens of thousands of students).
The University of London "Colleges" operate as independent universities, and are considered as such. This is not the case with the Oxford and Cambridge colleges.
Ah now it makes sense! :) maybe he likes to eat guacamole when he paints his aquarelli ;) or even paints with it.. though I guess technically it wont be aquarelli any more..
Crazy how the 2 swiss institutes of technology are so not known, though they are the best and the third best non-american or british universities in the world...
I once watched an episode of Jeopardy! where a contestant's interesting fact was that he attended "the University of Michigan, the largest elite institution in the world" and I have never wanted to punch someone so badly in my life.
Relax, it's just a quiz
Citations per faculty: 20%
International student ratio: 5%
A lot more people speak mandarin than french.. language is far from being the only determinant, but it does have an influence. Comparison of universities and the worth of their education are two different things, although some indicators are interesting.
Alternatively, feel free to tell me that the quiz already does accept "beijing," and I simply misspelled it like a dummy :)
Suggest therefore that many of the COLLEGES at Oxford and Cambridge would push many of the USA Universities down the list.
Coxbury