User talk:Tean91

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Related to the Schulich School of Business
Nice effort with the editing. A couple of minor points here: Let's keep the intro as an intro. Be general in the intro. I am not even sure who did that edit of one specific ranking in the intro, but the question becomes why one and not another. An overall average seems to be appropriate in that position of the page, wouldn't you agree? Second, the rankings section itself was fine and logical and had been vetted as such. What is your rationale for changing it? It is good to have the updated info, but please revert to & maintain the world/global and Canada/specialised sections. Check out the history of the page for more info, or just go ahead and revert it. The two sections help prevent Schulich types from cherrypicking data. There is an OBVIOUS conflict of interest if one admits to being a current student or alum. Whatever. I say, your edits will speak for themselves. Don't you agree that shilling for the school is against Wikipedia rules? Those two sections served a purpose. Please revert to them with the data you have added. That would be terrific! Incidentally, the most recent 2009 stuff comes first, then the earlier 2009 rankings, then the late 2008 ones, etc... If you don't bother replying to my questions then I will just put that section as it was in November. Cheers! COYW (talk) 05:35, 26 October 2009 (UTC)

Hello. I do not know who edited it but this page is shaping up nicely. Related to the rankings, I still think "global" refers to all schools compared on several criteria. Only a few bigger rankings are apples-to-apples studies of this sort. The "other rankings" are either national or limited in scope (i.e., Aspen). They are, in my view, meant to serve narrower interests. Of course, every "global" ranking has interested parties, too; surely, the school and the company publishing the rankings are interested parties! Anyhow, to mix them all together may suggest that they are all comparable. They aren't. That said, I think the two extant categories should be returned to the useful "Global Rankings/Other Rankings" division. Chronological order should be respected. By and large, copying the presentation of stocks (current level/change from last year/3-yr. moving average) is about as fair as I have seen anywhere on Wikipedia and I have visited and edited a lot of similar pages. Fair enough? What say you? COYW (talk) 19:12, 30 November 2009 (UTC)

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ArbCom elections are now open!
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