<p>They certainly gamed the system, but by gaming it they got lots more money, a very heightened reputation, a higher student quality, and are using those resources to their advantage. The school is building and hiring at a similar rate to its rise up the rankings. No matter where the resources came from, it is very visible that both the academic quality and the facilities are getting better. The hype did come first, but the hype actually led to the results people would expect from the ranking. It’s like a self fulfilling prophecy: get ranked higher, get more money for it, get better students for it, use said money to get better facilities and academic quality. In the end everyone gets what they wanted.</p>
<p>The co-op program is certainly not for everyone, but these days what major isn’t “professional”? Most people go to college with job security as a major reason if not the primary reason, so why shouldn’t a college education reflect that?</p>
<p>Excluding true pure academics with the ability to focus less on post-grad and more on their genuine academic interests, everyone else is pretty much “professional”. The reason people go to college has changed, especially with a college degree meaning less and less in terms of job security.</p>
<p>Sparkeye, have you timed Josh in the 40 yet? Can he block? Can we put him on the line, or is he destined for the backfield? At six months, we may have to put him at Nose Guard.</p>
<p>No kidding, LakeWashington!! Judging from what I’ve seen how the Buckeyes played last Saturday against the Hokies, Josh could probably crawl faster if not block better than the entire team. :p</p>