UCB is now openly using AP scores in admissions. They’re only SAT/ACT blind. And (no surprise) AP scores are correlated with SAT scores. |
This is completely wrong, "real professors" teach almost all the STEM classes, unlike at some schools where it is acceptable to have grad students do it. Discussion sections may be grad TAs. Still, it is a state school and resources are more limited. HYP for sure is a better option unless you are going for the in-state price. It's a great value for California students. |
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I did my graduate work at Berkeley and an undergrad at Harvard.
Both schools have strong students and lots of Nobel laureates. Both schools are very attractive to top scholars, and by poaching established academics, you tend to get strong lecturers. Both use the teaching model of having professors lecture and grad students teach labs and discussion sections. Berkeley OOS isn't that much cheaper than an Ivy. The main reason for this is the cost of housing. The difficulties with housing are a major reason to opt for HYP. If your kid has to cram into an off campus apartment, make all of their meals, and take a complicated transit route to school, it can be a major distraction. The difficulty in getting courses, or any other resources, can be substantial. The Nobel laureates at both places have office hours, but the ones at Berkeley have a line outside their offices. However, Berkeley has the weather (which is a major draw for the top scholars). It also has the openness, lack of conformity, and motivation levels that create innovation. Boston and (pre-Trump) DC are also agglomerations of well educated people that make things happen. Berkeley, however, is probably the most "what the heck, let's give it a try" sort of place. |
+1 you get what you pay for |
For most people, HYP is cheaper than UCB. |
But HYP is probably paying more per student. They have huge endowments for financial aid. |
| Berkeley definitely has a wow factor but HYP have a bit more wow factor. |
For some OOS people in the donut hole-ish range it might be, especially if they are full pay at UCB but get some aid at HYP. But not for most. College Navigator has the data on this. Average net price: Yale: $26,044 Princeton: $19,811 Harvard: $17,900 UCB: $16,997 Average net price for those making $110,001 and more: Harvard: $53,571 Yale: $49,347 Princeton: $39,943 UCB: $35,154 The above are for people who received grants, scholarships, or aid, but we know the sticker price is also less at UCB than the others, so if you are full pay it is cheaper at UCB too. Which is a good thing, unlike those silly PPs who think lower cost is somehow indicative of low quality. |
“Wow” is not what comes to mind when I hear of a top student attending Berkeley oos. “How” is the word that comes to mind. “How” could this process have been approached differently to get a better outcome? |
Classic survey example of kids with limited experience who don’t know any better. I feel sorry for them. |
+1 |
Classic DCUM example of belief perseverance. I feel sorry for you. |
The original thread was comparing in state Berkeley with HYP. This is a legitimate comparison, and I think kids may choose one or the other depending on major, family finances etc. Cornell is a close contender for engineering and Penn is better for business, but I’d choose in state Berkeley over Columbia, Brown, Dartmouth, and Yale for STEM. Most people would choose Harvard and Princeton over Berkeley, but they all are good options and there no wrong answer. It boils down to affordability and fit. It’s a little silly to put UVA and Virginia Tech on the same level with Berkeley. |
It’s a little silly to make this about in-state and then disparage UVA. By your criterion, UVA in-state over Berkeley. But we don’t really care about cost conscious folks or your wallet: Berkeley undergrad is in no way comparable to the schools you mentioned — for most applicants. What it is comparable to is UVA. oos UVA vs. oos Berkeley, most would go with UVA and it’s far superior undergraduate experience… |
| Poor people might purchase a Nissan over a BMW but that doesn’t say anything about quality. It just means that cost conscious buyers want to save money. |