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02-15-2011, 03:45 PM
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Join Date: Jun 2007
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Quote:
I'm glad Illinois hasn't taken the route of stripping directional names.
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I like the Virginia system of naming each school, other than its research flagship, after prominent person/s or concepts rather than locations. It allows each public school to build a unique brand, and none of them is marked as a particular tier due to being "directional." True, you can't tell from the name that James Madison University is located in Harrisonburg, but most of these schools serve an in-state market anyway, and in-state students already know or they can figure it out easily.
I think it would be great for the directionals in Illinois to become Abraham Lincoln U., Adlai Stevenson U., Jane Addams U....but nobody asked me, and I'm sure many alumni are attached to the existing names.
We can add Northwestern University to University of Southern California as another elite private exception to the rule that directions hurt prestige. Both schools are older than the oldest public schools in their respective cities.
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Last edited by Low C Sharp; 09-20-2011 at 05:31 PM.
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02-15-2011, 04:06 PM
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Join Date: Apr 2004
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Low C Sharp
We can add Northwestern University to University of Southern California as another elite private exception to the rule that directions hurt prestige. Both schools are older than the oldest public schools in their respective cities.
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I wouldn't, because Northwestern no longer really refers to a direction. It certainly did when it was founded, but now it's in the Midwest and isn't even in North-Western Illinois.
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02-15-2011, 04:13 PM
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Originally Posted by agzg
I wouldn't, because Northwestern no longer really refers to a direction. It certainly did when it was founded, but now it's in the Midwest and isn't even in North-Western Illinois.
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Right. Northwestern never referred to the part of the state it is in, which is what I think of when I think "directional school." It never referred to a direction at all. It was named for the former Northwest Territory.
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02-15-2011, 05:39 PM
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Join Date: Apr 2005
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Quote:
Originally Posted by MysticCat
Right. Northwestern never referred to the part of the state it is in, which is what I think of when I think "directional school." It never referred to a direction at all. It was named for the former Northwest Territory.
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So now I've learned something today. Can I go home now?
Quote:
Originally Posted by Low C Sharp
I like the Virginia system of naming each school, other than its research flagship, after prominent person/s or concepts rather than locations. It allows each public school to build a unique brand, and none of them is marked as a particular tier due to being "directional." True, you can't tell from the name that James Madison University is located in Harrisonburg, but most of these schools serve an in-state market anyway, and in-state students already know or they can figure it out easily.
I think it would be great for the directionals in Illinois to become Abraham Lincoln U., Adlai Stevenson U., Jane Addams U....but nobody asked me, and I'm sure many alumni are attached to the existing names.
We can add Northwestern University to University of Southern California as another elite private exception to the rule that directions hurt prestige. Both schools are older than the oldest public schools in their respective cities.
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No one wants to go to Adlai Stevenson U. Just ain't happening. And I can't see SIUC/E, EIU, WIU, or alternately ISU giving up their names. They're well known for different things and would lose a lot of identity that way. I haven't seen a lot of pressure for that sort of change here either, but I'm not attending one of them so I don't know.
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02-15-2011, 05:56 PM
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Join Date: Dec 2005
Posts: 1,649
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Low C Sharp
I like the Virginia system of naming each school, other than its research flagship, after prominent person/s or concepts rather than locations. It allows each public school to build a unique brand, and none of them is marked as a particular tier due to being "directional." True, you can't tell from the name that James Madison University is located in Harrisonburg, but most of these schools serve an in-state market anyway, and in-state students already know or they can figure it out easily.
I think it would be great for the directionals in Illinois to become Abraham Lincoln U., Adlai Stevenson U., Jane Addams U....but nobody asked me, and I'm sure many alumni are attached to the existing names.
We can add Northwestern University to University of Southern California as another elite private exception to the rule that directions hurt prestige. Both schools are older than the oldest public schools in their respective cities.
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There is UVA and then UVA-Wise. George Mason in Fairfax was a UVA branch campus when it was first founded. William and Mary was initially a private college. Although they were and are publics, James Madison and Mary Washington were all single-sex as was UVA. UVA only went co-ed in the 70s and of course VMI even later than that. There are still a couple of women's colleges and one all-male college in the Commonwealth but they are all private.
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