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Armorshell,
I read the article the last time you posted it. Anyways, I'm not trying to equate the school to how well people do -- this is based solely on the person. I was simply making the point that Ivy League schools and some very good private and public institutions provide their students with more opportunity, which can lead to more personal success on a level that cannot be measured by standardized exams. I completely understand your point. This same article can be related to dental school. People tend to believe that going to Penn for dental school they are automatically going to get a 99 on Part 1, which is just complete ignorance.
I also wanted to entertain the response someone had about "how difficult or easy a school can make a science course?" I attended a pretty competitive undergrad but took a biochemistry course over the summer at CSULB and saw just how easy a school can make a course; however, this is one course, so I'm not sure how easy or hard the other science courses are at CSULB, but from my experience you can cram a lot into a course or very little. Also, you need to think about curves. This can make a class much harder than it would be at another institution where students are less competitive (read: not as bright).
But, in the end people, this subjected has been debated over and over again. A big name school will help you IF you do well. Don't attend a pricey, competitive school just for the name if you don't think you can hang. Think about it, not everyone attending an Ivy League school was a merit scholar and valedictorian.
See, the point you're missing is that you actually think the big schools actually provide something tangible to students that a state school can't. I hear all this talk about "increased opportunities for research" and "no curves" and "no multiple choice tests" and it sounds like you're describing the "4th tier" undergrad school that I went to. All of these "increased opportunities" you're preaching exist at the state school level, but you just don't seem to be able to see or understand that for some reason.