Hansel Posted February 13, 2004 Share Posted February 13, 2004 This past year we exceeded the threshold for the Carnegie classification of Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
The Sicatoka Posted February 13, 2004 Share Posted February 13, 2004 As a "land grant", NDSU is allowed to bid on certain government that research that UND is not allowed to bid on. Being #200 without that preference program in place working for it (I'll avoid the unlevel playing field characterization) working for UND is far from a bad thing. Alternatively, all that money to NDSU and they still haven't reached that particular Carngie level? Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Hansel Posted February 13, 2004 Share Posted February 13, 2004 As a "land grant", NDSU is allowed to bid on certain government that research that UND is not allowed to bid on. Being #200 without that preference program in place working for it (I'll avoid the unlevel playing field characterization) working for UND is far from a bad thing. Alternatively, all that money to NDSU and they still haven't reached that particular Carngie level? You would think having a Medical School/Law School would level the playing field as I beleive there may be a dollar or two in Medical Research (cancer?) as opposed to lowly "ag research"... also since Carnegie Classification is based solely on number of grad students (essentially employees)... would you rather work for a smaller company with a larger budget... or a larger company with a smaller budget .. also let me state that I am proud of research done by both universities as it is beneficial to the state of ND (jobs, $ etc) Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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