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way to feed the flames 🙄g3pro said:Knowing that my grades are worth more than what students get at Ivy Leagues is truly rewarding. 👍
way to feed the flames 🙄g3pro said:Knowing that my grades are worth more than what students get at Ivy Leagues is truly rewarding. 👍
Fed Meat said:Vandy may have been in this group, as well; I don't remember.
SarahGM said:How do we get inflation from the school? As I said, the means for each class are published next to the student's grades for each class right on the transcript, for adcoms to see.
Fed Meat said:Tougher grading top schools were Cornell, Emory, Rice, and Chicago. Vandy may have been in this group, as well; I don't remember.
wetlightning said:THAT SOUNDS LIKE WAKE FOREST!!!! another top 30 school with grading from hell.....😱 😱
our sci class median is C-, and our health committee sends out a letter to med schools informing them that only the top 25% of the class at WFU graduates with a 3.3 or above......
hopefully duke will keep this in mind when they see my app!rumor has it that they multiply WFU gpa's by 1.1 to equalize them, but i'm sure it's all totally false
BOBODR said:I went to Wake Forest too Wet - its downright ridiculous the amount of deflation that goes on. Average gpa is a 2.98 at Wake for all students... not even a B average![]()
wetlightning said:are you SERIOUS?! i didn't know that statistic....omg
it really is ridiculous, and yet i find it's hard to make people believe me when i say that, b/c i don't think wake has a huge reputation outside of NC 🙁 😡
BOBODR said:Look at it this way, I graduated with a little over a 3.5 in Aug 2004. This put me in the top 15 % of the class. Apparently if I went to Dartmouth and graduated with a 3.5 I would have been in the bottom 15 % of the class 🙄
Yes the fact is true. Not hard to believe since only a quarter of the class has a 3.3 or higher. The 2.98 is when I graduated in Aug last yr. You can ask the register for this years.
BOBODR said:Whoa chill out. It was a joke. I was talking about WFU and then the list someone else posted. Looks like someone is a little defensive about their school. And I said "apparently" with a rolled eye face.... you need to chill before you hurt yourself.
And I didnt say anything about Dartmouth was a fact. I said it was a fact that the average GPA at Wake was a 2.98... read carefully, I know you can since you and the rest of Dartmouth got an A in Enlgish (that is a joke again).
BOBODR said:Whoa chill out. It was a joke. I was talking about WFU and then the list someone else posted. Looks like someone is a little defensive about their school.
SarahGM said:Damn straight... I heart my school 😍
I'm sorry if I misread you -- sarcasm is often lost over internet forums.
biggreen05 said:i think people are just jealous that we can do the salty dog rag so well
dartmouth '05
yale som '09
riceman04 said:THAT'S RIGHT!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!CUZ I SURELY DID NOT BENEFIT FROM NO FREAKIN INFLATION.
ORGO - MEAN SET AT A C FREAKIN MINUS
BIOC - HARD AS HELL
GENETICS - OMG....PLEASE NO CUSSING RIGHT NOW
PHYSICAL CHEM - UMMMMMM..............BRAIN DEAD, FLATLINED, TACHYCARDIA?..NOPE...BRADYCARDIA?....NOPE, NOCARDIA?.....YEP!
At rice: GPA = grade point assasination
No really my friend from my alma mater (GO OWLS, 2003 college world series champs) said that when she went on interviews during this past app system all the adcoms were asking her how she managed to maintain a 3.4 at Rice b/c they try to kill your gpa.
stifler said:http://www.dartmouth.edu/~reg/courses/medians/04f.html
if this isnt massive grade inflation then i dont know what is.
wow i go to a school like dartmouth except non ivy and we dont have grades that generous. makes me angry.
okay sorry if i offended you. but yea im giong to try to study away there because itll be cool to leave my college for another one for a semester. so if you are from dartmouth mind leaving me a aim sn or email so i can ask you some questions about upper level sci courses? thanks!
g3pro said:Knowing that my grades are worth more than what students get at Ivy Leagues is truly rewarding. 👍
Because you have a high numerical GPA. If you don't look at the transcript, which I doubt happens all the time, have a 3.5 is considered to be a good GPA meaning you were near the top of your class (not the median like at Dartmouth). That is from the school.SarahGM said:How do we get inflation from the school? As I said, the means for each class are published next to the student's grades for each class right on the transcript, for adcoms to see.
stifler said:how about one of your dartmouth ppl help me figure out what physical chemistry is like at dartmouth cuz i might be heading over in a year to take it and to study away
wetlightning said:but you're implying that other students don't work their butts off...
many kids go to schools where they do work incredibly hard and still face C- averages...especially in a class like p-chem
not to mention, the additional bolster that an ivy reputation gives you in the med school admissions process must be considered
i'm not trying to say that dartmouth kids aren't incredibly smart and hardworking, etc...but there is a definite distinction when most schools (even state schools) receive C averages in hard science courses whereas ivies have a "low" of B+
BrettBatchelor said:Because you have a high numerical GPA. If you don't look at the transcript, which I doubt happens all the time, have a 3.5 is considered to be a good GPA meaning you were near the top of your class (not the median like at Dartmouth). That is from the school.
Then people hear the Dartmouth name and assume if you have a 3.5 from Dartmouth, you are near the top of an elite school.
BrettBatchelor said:I realize that but also the problem there lies outside the realm of professional school.
I am talking about also gaining employment where HR isn't always up to date on these issues.
hunniejl said:not to get nasty, but dream on
hunniejl said:for your first point and last points, read the post right below yours.
secondly, i'm sorry but you clearly don't know what you're talking about. have you applied to med school yet? i actually got a phonecall from one of the med schools i applied to (by my regional admissions officer) telling me they were really impressed by my application, especially my research experience and publication, but saying that they hadn't been offering interviews to anyone below a certain gpa, which i was just under. some schools may take your undergrad college into account when you apply, but there are cutoffs and a numbers game that you simply cannot get past in the admissions process. clearly, my ivy league institution reputation didn't do much for me at that school other than earn me an apologetic phonecall. i'm sure that's why i wasn't interviewed at several other schools i've applied to as well.
Fantasy Sports said:Uh... you can get a 4.3 at Rice for an A+... which is the ultimate grade inflation because its not even on the same scale as everyone else!
Also, Houston isn't in the "South" persay (so Rice is the Harvard of Texas... good school though). The bigtime schools in the South (which doesn't include TX) are Duke, Vanderbilt, and Emory.
I dont really care if Dartmouth or anyone else grade inflates to a C+ instead of a C because in the end the MCAT will even things out.
hunniejl said:sorry sweetie, but adcoms are smarter than that. in fact, a number of prestigious med schools have certain adcom members assigned to specific schools so they are very familiar with the nature of the school, as well as grade inflation patterns.
mercaptovizadeh said:Stifler:
I find your posts curious, since you start out by bashing Dartmouth as a "notorious" grade inflater, when it is near the bottom of the Ivy league in terms of grade inflation, and then you say that you want to transfer to the school.
A couple of suggestions and points if you are a chem major:
The undergraduate chem major, i.e. the pedagogy, at Dartmouth is HIGHLY respected. Although the school is not a big research school in any field, certainly not chemistry (as compared to Harvard, MIT, CalTech, Berkeley, etc.), its teaching is one of the very best. If you do well in those classes, and do some research with the faculty (some of which are quite excellent: Lemal is at the forefront of fluorine organic chemistry, Gribble is a reknowned natural products/synthetic chemist, and Winn has written an excellent textbook called "Physical Chemistry" that are used in the upper level 71, 72, 73 pchem classes, for example); you can basically go to grad school wherever you want.
The year I graduated, out of less than ten students who went on to grad school, one went to Harvard, another to Berkeley, another to Caltech, another to Chicago. I know that in this last graduating class, one person (maybe more) is going to Berkeley, and in the year before I graduated, one guy went to MIT. I'm sure there are even more that I have not heard of. The above schools are really the very best in chemistry in the world. So, yes, a Dartmouth degree in chemistry is very well respected, and those A's are deserved, despite your claims of "notorious grade inflation."
As much as I think people unfairly assume that every class at every upper-level school is grade inflated, I also think that your comments are ridiculous. An off-term class? Like summer? Any "off-term" class I've taken has always been easier, and it was multiple choice. Same prof during the spring? Essay exam. Judging state schools because you took a summer class is ridiculous and asinine.squeage said:science classes at dartmouth are most certainly harder than those at state schools. during an off term, i took a physiology class at miami (i know it's not technically a state school, but for all intents and purposes, it is). not only were the tests easy, but they were all multiple choice, since it's an easier format to grade with huge classes. i had a friend taking a physiology class at dartmouth (used same text as miami) and saw his exams. they were much harder than at miami. there were no multiple choice questions; they were all long, written answers, etc, which is more difficult, since you can be docked points here and there in your responses. you don't see many multiple choice exams at dartmouth b/c the classes are generally smaller than state schools and written "essay" questions are a better way to test a student's knowledge of the subject.
TheMightyAngus said:This is turning into a pissing contest. My OChem is better than your OChem. My school is better than your school. Oh yeah! It's all bullsh*t. You learn the same material in Dartmouth's chem as you do in Harvard, Ohio State, Santa Barbara Community College, Kaplan, Princeton Review, etc. Yeah, your experience and fellow students might be different, but every school has their share of brains and dipsh*ts. Most schools brag about their noble prizes and fields medals. Every school has alumni that went on to bigger and more prestigious places. If going to an ivy league makes you hot s h it, what about those who turn ivy leagues down? What are they? HOT HOT s h it?
mercaptovizadeh said:Stifler:
I find your posts curious, since you start out by bashing Dartmouth as a "notorious" grade inflater, when it is near the bottom of the Ivy league in terms of grade inflation, and then you say that you want to transfer to the school.
A couple of suggestions and points if you are a chem major:
The undergraduate chem major, i.e. the pedagogy, at Dartmouth is HIGHLY respected. Although the school is not a big research school in any field, certainly not chemistry (as compared to Harvard, MIT, CalTech, Berkeley, etc.), its teaching is one of the very best. If you do well in those classes, and do some research with the faculty (some of which are quite excellent: Lemal is at the forefront of fluorine organic chemistry, Gribble is a reknowned natural products/synthetic chemist, and Winn has written an excellent textbook called "Physical Chemistry" that are used in the upper level 71, 72, 73 pchem classes, for example); you can basically go to grad school wherever you want.
The year I graduated, out of less than ten students who went on to grad school, one went to Harvard, another to Berkeley, another to Caltech, another to Chicago. I know that in this last graduating class, one person (maybe more) is going to Berkeley, and in the year before I graduated, one guy went to MIT. I'm sure there are even more that I have not heard of. The above schools are really the very best in chemistry in the world. So, yes, a Dartmouth degree in chemistry is very well respected, and those A's are deserved, despite your claims of "notorious grade inflation."
stifler said:for one i not transferring to dartmouth because i am very happy where i am. i would only see what it is like at dartmouth and to avoid the slaughter in physical chemistry. i attend a school of dartmouth's caliber if not higher (according to us news).
also i think its very amusing that people who attend ivies hold themselves in such high esteem. let it be known that just because you attend an ivy doesnt mean others are not of your caliber and cant go through what you have endured. i chose not to matriculate at one of the ivy league schools for various reasons, but one of them being the type of personalities that some (a few) students have.
anyways, im sure your physical chemistry class is hard or even really hard as are all your science courses. at my school we have a similar system like dartmouth 1 credit for the course and that includes the lab. no lab not credit for the course. and labs take just as long as the course itself. i think i know very how difficult sciences can be. as for the B+ in physical chem for an median, its a reason why i am considering studying for one semester, because the median at my school is a C and dartmouth certainty has a lot of respect for courses at my school seeing as that any course you take at my school you will get credit for at yours.
anyways enough of the arguing, i have my opinions you have your own. if i attend dartmouth for one semester i will see if there really is grade inflation or not, but more so to learn physical chemistry, and compete with the best (yes i think dartmouth is a wonderful school, and had I not been accepted to my current college I would be very happy there). but i am curious what is the difference between 61 and 71? and as for the math involved, do you suggest multivariable as a prereq. I am prepared to bust ass because it is the hardest course in my major.
as for the ass kicking ill receive? ill take it. its expected. its pchem, but if i earn a B- or above in it im not rescinding what I said because I would not get that grade with that professor in that course.
mercaptovizadeh said:Well, I don't have time to comment on the rest of your post, we seem to be running in circles anyway. But I'm glad to assist with course logistics.
Chem 61, 62 is a sequence designed for people who are less excited about rigorous math and especially for pre-meds and biologically/organic oriented majors. In practice, the material is practically the same, and, depending on the professor, the tests may be just as hard as in the 70 sequence, but will cover fewer topics.
Briefly, when I took it, 61 covered thermodynamics (all three laws, principles of temperature, debye and einstein heat capacities), the ideal gas law and manipulations with it, maxwell cross relations, E, H, A/F and G (the Gibbs and Helmholtz free energies) in differential form, van't Hoff equation, Clapeyron equation, phases of matter, as well as ideal and nonideal solutions, colligative properties, and gas behavior and some effusion.
I've also covered the material for 71. It also covers thermodynamics a bit more intensely, and all of the above, as well as a bit of surface chemistry, and especially real gases (a lot on that).
To give you a heads up, Ira Levine's book "Physical Chemistry" is used in C61/62 and John Winn's book of the same name is used for C71/72/73. You could perhaps borrow one or both beforehand to see which appeals to you more.
As for the particular math you need, they require vector calculus for the 70s and just multivariable for the 60s, but in my experience, 60s should suffice for either sequence. You really don't need to know vectors for either 61 or 71, though maybe they are more relevant for 72 since it works with the bra ket (vector space) notation for quantum mechanics.
If you do choose to spend a term at Dartmouth, have a great time and enjoy yourself! 61 is in the spring, and in mid April through June, it can be very nice up there!
stifler said:how do i find out who teaches 61 or 71? i can check out their ratings on ratemyprofessor.com. and is the lab required for 61 and an integral part of the course? at my school its a huge lab course physical chemistry lab, but its not required for biochem majors, just chem majors. so i was wondering if i can get out of the lab for 61 or does it count for part of the grade?
mercaptovizadeh said:Hey hunniejl, I just realized who you are. Met you once at Woodstock (with M. Yam...) and took inorganic the same year. Applying this year or last year? I'm applying now, hope to get all the stuff within a week.
g3pro said:It's reality. A 3.5 from Dartmuff or Harvard does not trump a 3.5 or 3.6 at a non-Ivy. Sorry to say. kthxbye.
TheMightyAngus said:If going to an ivy league makes you hot s h it, what about those who turn ivy leagues down? What are they? HOT HOT s h it?
mercaptovizadeh said:Listen, we Dartmouth students and alumni didn't start this thread. Someone else, who doesn't go to Dartmouth, started this thread, just so he/she could bash the "terrible" grade-inflation that we have here. Then, other imbeciles like g3pro chimed in. This is typical. It isn't us Ivy "snobs" who start threads about the "easy" education at state schools. It's always the other way around. Whatever, this is so old. Just mind your own business and support your own school if you like, but stop bashing ours.
stifler said:for one i not transferring to dartmouth because i am very happy where i am. i would only see what it is like at dartmouth and to avoid the slaughter in physical chemistry. i attend a school of dartmouth's caliber if not higher (according to us news).
also i think its very amusing that people who attend ivies hold themselves in such high esteem. let it be known that just because you attend an ivy doesnt mean others are not of your caliber and cant go through what you have endured. i chose not to matriculate at one of the ivy league schools for various reasons, but one of them being the type of personalities that some (a few) students have.
anyways, im sure your physical chemistry class is hard or even really hard as are all your science courses. at my school we have a similar system like dartmouth 1 credit for the course and that includes the lab. no lab not credit for the course. and labs take just as long as the course itself. i think i know very how difficult sciences can be. as for the B+ in physical chem for an median, its a reason why i am considering studying for one semester, because the median at my school is a C and dartmouth certainty has a lot of respect for courses at my school seeing as that any course you take at my school you will get credit for at yours.
anyways enough of the arguing, i have my opinions you have your own. if i attend dartmouth for one semester i will see if there really is grade inflation or not, but more so to learn physical chemistry, and compete with the best (yes i think dartmouth is a wonderful school, and had I not been accepted to my current college I would be very happy there). but i am curious what is the difference between 61 and 71? and as for the math involved, do you suggest multivariable as a prereq. I am prepared to bust ass because it is the hardest course in my major.
as for the ass kicking ill receive? ill take it. its expected. its pchem, but if i earn a B- or above in it im not rescinding what I said because I would not get that grade with that professor in that course.