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Malcolm Gladwell explored this choice in his latest book.
He concluded that it's usually better to be a top student at a 'non-elite' university than an average student at an 'elite' one.
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"In another fascinating section — and the entire book is full of eye-brow raising moments, all laid out in deceptively simple, even folksy, prose — Gladwell convincingly shows that it is better to be a Big Fish in a Small Pond than a Small Fish in a Big Pond. Meaning, if you are brainy enough in math and science to get accepted at both Harvard and another less prestigious school, but not brainy enough to dominate your field, you should probably go to the less prestigious school. For one thing, you will be less likely to drop out in frustration. For another, a study he cites shows that when it comes to hiring, “the best students from mediocre schools were almost always a better bet than good students from the very best schools.”
“The Big Pond,” Gladwell adds, explaining the effect of being in a classroom surrounded by the super intelligent when you are only extremely intelligent, “takes really bright students and demoralizes them.” "
David and Goliath by Malcolm Gladwell: review | Toronto Star
He concluded that it's usually better to be a top student at a 'non-elite' university than an average student at an 'elite' one.
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"In another fascinating section — and the entire book is full of eye-brow raising moments, all laid out in deceptively simple, even folksy, prose — Gladwell convincingly shows that it is better to be a Big Fish in a Small Pond than a Small Fish in a Big Pond. Meaning, if you are brainy enough in math and science to get accepted at both Harvard and another less prestigious school, but not brainy enough to dominate your field, you should probably go to the less prestigious school. For one thing, you will be less likely to drop out in frustration. For another, a study he cites shows that when it comes to hiring, “the best students from mediocre schools were almost always a better bet than good students from the very best schools.”
“The Big Pond,” Gladwell adds, explaining the effect of being in a classroom surrounded by the super intelligent when you are only extremely intelligent, “takes really bright students and demoralizes them.” "
David and Goliath by Malcolm Gladwell: review | Toronto Star