3rd best college in Illinois

charcat

Redshirt
Apr 11, 2006
547
39
17
These kinds of studies are often littered with bad data, bias in who chooses to report data and questions of accuracy in reporting. Differing majors and career choices, geographies and graduate school choices will significantly impact the numbers.

It does illustrate, however, that having a large percentage of engineers tends to raise your early career earnings, but that effect may not last to mid career. What that tells you about the quality of the students is less clear.
 

Tolstoy32

Redshirt
Mar 17, 2003
6
0
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Meh. I don't think salary data is wrong on this one. The bias would go all ways. Pretty sure they have more engineers making more money, which makes sense.

Illinois has more engineers than NU has students. And they are top 5 in that.

Mid career flattened out at 102K.

Did you miss that?
 
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PURPLE Book Cat

Redshirt
Sep 2, 2007
2,465
39
0
I'm a patent attorney making enough, just can't argue with numbers.
I'm also a patent attorney. Any attorney who says "I can't argue" isn't a very good attorney.

Separately, anyone with a degree from the University of Chicago or Northwestern, or perhaps even Illinois (with a little extra effort) can achieve whatever they want and be greatly aided by their credential.
 

Katatonic

Sophomore
Oct 23, 2004
86,854
134
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Eh, these types of "studies" are misleading due to issues w/ reporting and not taking into account major factors like areas of study.

Northwestern has a big % of students studying education, music, theater, journalism and other relatively low paying fields.