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i am studying in final year of b.pharm in india. i want to do masters in usa. as a part of it , i have given gre and i got 1060. i will give toefl in next month. in it i will able to get score nearly 85 to 90. my academic is 66 percentage. so i want to know that in which college i may get admi. nd which is now a days a best demanding course for master degree in pharmacy field in usa & wat is chances of getting jobs in usa in pharma industry after study? & wat is chances of scholarship for me at this above academic study and average fee structure of clg for 1 year fee of master study?

smit shah 4:25AM August 19, 2009

basically i am an average student with schooling 85%, than in intermediate i secured 73% and during my bachelor degree in mechanical engineering my percentage was 58% will please suggest me in which college i will be able to get admission for my masters in mechanical engineering so that i can recover from the low grading in BE , my GRE score 1010 and toafel score is 94

jadhav sai shreshtha of KS 11:27AM August 02, 2009

basically i am an average student with schooling 85%, than in intermediate i secured 73% and during my bachelor degree in mechanical engineering my percentage was 58% will please suggest me in which college i will be able to get admission for my masters in mechanical engineering so that i can recover from the low grading in BE

jadhav sai shreshtha of KS 11:23AM August 02, 2009

Non-competitive majors should be featured more prominently as significant to the prestige of a college or university. It has become clear to me that very competitive majors such as business and psychology are more commonly featured, where more advanced majors such as actuarial science and aerospace engineering are largely ignored for lack of popularity. Clearly popularity should be irrelevant in more challenging majors. Majors that would should merit the faculty and program of a particular school more than the prototype. Certainly a good program in actuarial science (averaging 3 exams per graduate) is worth more than many excellent programs in the ever-popular business sector.

Josiah Brehm of PA 1:14AM July 30, 2009

I wonder where your Ivy League biased rankings will fall after this year's applications for the class of 2013 where Stanford had more applications than Harvard, Yale and Princeton, an acceptance rate equal to Harvard and Yale, and a far lower acceptance rate than Princeton ( 7% versus 12% ). In additon, none of the aforementioned Ivies have an engineering program even remotely close to that of Stanford while Stanford is ranked at the level of Caltech and MIT for its strength and breadth of engineering programs - witness Google, Yahoo, HP, SUN Microsystems. Stanford also offers a liberal arts education competitive with any of the Ivies.

If one looks beyond academics and at sports, none of the other top ten schools in your rankings offer the same level of student athletic performance. Stanford has won the NCAA Governor's cup for the past 14 years in a row, 2nd all-time NCAA championships and most NCAA championships since 1980.

Peter Chang of CA 12:27AM June 24, 2009

i studied about your college i become very happy and want to get admission in your institute on basis of scholorship if you like please send me message please

rashid of NY 5:06AM June 22, 2009

parsons the new school for design is one of the top design schools in america, yet it is not listed in the specialty school section?

anne kim of NY 3:41AM June 17, 2009

What specific awards for faculty are weighted into the faculty equation?

UCSD Student of CA 11:37AM June 05, 2009

I am not sure why universities offering online courses such as the Walden uni is not included in the general ranking of universities. The online ranking and the general acreditation makes such universities inline with others if I am not wrong

amal noureldin 2:19PM June 01, 2009

From the category heading, I was not sure if the number of Transfer Students was measuring the number of students that had transferred into that school or the number of students that had transferred out of that school to another school.

So 1) You might consider making that a little more clearer somehow. Both measures would be valuable for different purposes to some of your readers.

3) I am not sure if the data set is available to do the analysis, but the other measure I mentioned above, i.e. The number of students that a school has that transfer to another institution, would be a useful ranking. This is especially true with the economic situation driving more four year students to community colleges. So, which community colleges are sending the most students out to four year schools. would be the question. Just a thought.

Terry Eberhart of NY 7:45PM May 14, 2009

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