A bit of help please

A couple of articles I have read refer to our status in regards to being an AAU school. What exactly does that mean? Thanks.
GotMyESPY wrote:According to their site, 9 of the 12 PAC12 schools are AAU members. https://www.aau.edu/who-we-are/our-members
Washington
Oregon
Cal
Stanford
UCLA
USC
Arizona
Colorado
Utah
Also note that San Diego State is NOT an AAU member; UC San Diego is a member. Some reporters have gotten them confused. Big difference between the two schools.
Topper wrote:GotMyESPY wrote:According to their site, 9 of the 12 PAC12 schools are AAU members. https://www.aau.edu/who-we-are/our-members
Washington
Oregon
Cal
Stanford
UCLA
USC
Arizona
Colorado
Utah
Also note that San Diego State is NOT an AAU member; UC San Diego is a member. Some reporters have gotten them confused. Big difference between the two schools.
AAU schools tend to be flagship state universities rather than cow colleges. I may be wrong but I think Kansas is the only AAU school in the Big 12. On the other hand it seems to be a criteria for the Big 10 which is why the Big 10 poaching of Oregon and Washington are the biggest threats to the PAC 12 if academic coherence is as important as some think.
orguy wrote:SMU is close to AAU status. Strong Engineering and Science programs are key.
Business schools contribute little to nothing to a given Universities AAU status.
Important to note that many AAU schools are not super academic. I think Nebraska
was AAU and lost their status after joining the Big 10.
It's harder for smaller schools like SMU to achieve this status for several reasons.
1. Far too much emphasis on the B school. 2. No Medical school and 3. Our
large Greek system which discourages students from taking on academically
rigorous majors.