[Husker] It is Done
Kathy Jackson
kj60028 at windstream.net
Sat Jun 12 07:18:37 CDT 2010
Maybe I just want to make sure I am not still and idiot after getting
two degrees from UNL but I would have to say that depending on what
department you are in you will be working with some of the leading
researchers in their fields. I know that in the late 90's when I was
getting a masters degree from the school of biological science they
were also interviewing for some faculty positions. One of the things
the candidates did was have lunch with the graduate students where we
got to ask anything we wanted. We then were able to express our
opinion to the committee - one factor among many but hey at least they
asked. Anyway one of the questions we would always ask was how was
UNL's biology department viewed out in the big world. The general
answer was that lots of universities had one "big gun" who was very
good and very famous. UNL had quality across the department with
researchers who were known and respected in their field across the
country. I know when I got my BS the animal science department was
top notch and the food science department is one of the top 3 in the
nation. I am sure there are other departments that are equally
respected, so it sounds like we won't have to be the poor relation
joining the big 10.
Student attitude has lots to do with their success and overall
experience in any University. I am sure plenty of kids party/drink
their way out of big 10 schools just as they do at UNL.
Kathy Jackson
On Jun 11, 2010, at 7:51 PM, Steve Reichenbach wrote:
>> Granted it was in the 80s, but i received two degrees from Nebraska
>> and a Ph.D. from Illinois. It was night and day; academically the
>> Big
>> 10 fully deserves its reputation. From that standpoint alone, i am
>> ecstatic about NU joining the Big 10.
>
> I think that the differences between national PhD-granting research
> universities is greatly exaggerated. I earned a BA from Nebraska in
> the 1970s, earned an MS from Washington University (St. Louis) and a
> PhD from William and Mary in the 1980s, and currently am on the
> faculty
> at UNL. Washington University is a "top" research university and
> William and Mary is a "top" national university.
>
> In my experience and opinion, there is more variation within a
> department
> of a university than there is between departments of different
> universities. Many of UNL's faculty are better than most faculty at
> the "top" research universities. For example, see this link ranking
> UNL faculty members among the world's top 50 software engineering
> scholars (G. Rothermel #2, M. Dwyer #29, S. Elbaum #50):
> http://portal.acm.org/citation.cfm?doid=1247001.1247010
>
> So, I believe that "night and day" is an inaccurate characterization
> of the academics at UNL versus the Big 10 schools. A student's
> experience has far more to do with who they work with and what they
> do than in which university they are enrolled.
>
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