

willthatsall said:This talk about preference for prestigious undergrads and grade inflations and all that stuff made me think. So if you could have a 4.0 from any school in the U.S. taking all that stuff into account, where would it be? I'm taking MIT.
WatchingWaiting said:In terms of just difficulty involved, probably Caltech. In terms of overall educational experience plus prestige value, Haa-vard.
willthatsall said:This talk about preference for prestigious undergrads and grade inflations and all that stuff made me think. So if you could have a 4.0 from any school in the U.S. taking all that stuff into account, where would it be? I'm taking MIT.

papertiger said:Fashion Institute
dartty said:Georgia Tech.. hardest school to get a 4.0 in the nation

SanDiegoSOD said:Lounge material?
But to play along, I would choose Caltech.
willthatsall said:Yeah, I like Hahvahd too, but the grade inflation thing makes it not quite as impressive as MIT in my book. Yeah, Cal Tech too.
skypilot said:Harvard so I could drop little H bombs wherever I go.
liverotcod said:I have to admit that, even with a 2.95 from there, dropping H bombs can be kinda fun.
"Hahhhhhh-vahd" You're right. That is pretty fun! 😀Benjo said:Definitely Princeton. The prestige factor is astronomical, and unparalleled even by Harvard, which everybody knows is worthless for undergrad (forgive the hyperbole). It might be easy to pull gentleman's B+'s, but try beating out some of the most gunnerish pre-meds in the world for the very few A's in the molbio dept.
That being said, I am sure it is harder to get a 4.0 at one of the "techs" (Mass/Cal, not GA), but that doesn't carry the same prolonged "wow" factor as good 'ole Princeton.
rick james said:My undergrad - Johns Hopkins ... it is very difficult to pull the 4.0 here. I would also agree to Princeton. It is an amazing school, and how f*&%ing awesome would it be to say, "yeah, I was valedictorian of my class at Princeton."
Benjo said:These grade inflation disclaimers are pretty meaningless in this forum, since the presumption is that we are talkng about obtaining a 4.0 with a courseload that includes at least the minimum pre-med requirements. Since that is the necessary foundation for discussion, saying that certain Ivy league schools have grade inflation is just ignorant. Science classes at these schools (ahem...Princeton) are set to the same median as everywhere else--the only difference is you are competing with the best and brightest instead of the almost best and brightest (forgive the gross generalization). So, de facto, the most competitive schools to get into and the schools that attract the most qualiied students must be the hardest to get a 4.0 with a science-based curriculum.