Campus visit JHU

Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:Hopkins does not have 17000 grad students. It has 8,500, only 2000 of which are on the undergrad campus. There are roughly 6300 undergraduates at the Homewood campus, so they clearly dominate the campus. Some of you are allergic to facts. People pursuing online executive certificate programs are not graduate students nor are they on a campus.

You are wrong on so many levels. Presumably, you can read: 24000 grad students. The 17k is without the certificate programs.
Here’s the cite: https://oira.jhu.edu/graduate-enrollment-and-degrees/

Incidentally, grad enrollment has increased 50% the last 10 years…


There are still only 2000 graduate students at Homewood, Hopkins may count online executive program students as “graduate” students, but they still are not stepping foot on a campus.

No, there are not. Give a cite or go away. You keep repeating the same number with no cite. Your claim of 2/24k grad students at Homewood is off by several thousand. You said there were only 8,500 grad students and were shown there are 24k. Off by a magnitude of 3x. Cite was provided. Put up or shut up.


here you go moron:
“live and learn on our Homewood campus in North Baltimore, home to more than 5,000 undergrads and nearly 2,000 grad students”

https://www.jhu.edu/admissions/visit/

first paragraph. learn to do “research”

It’s 4k on Homewood. Full time. https://studentaffairs.jhu.edu/viceprovost/wp-content/uploads/sites/54/2021/09/Copy-of-FALL_2021_1.0-1-Enrollment-Report-by-Time-Status-Gender.pdf

Off by 100%. Here is an actual cite — maybe you can have someone count it for you. I said you were off by thousands — and you are.

And to the JHU worker, would be a shame if the federal cuts indirectly or directly impacted your job: you seem really competent.


Dp, full time doesn’t mean on campus. The engineering for professionals program for example, is not bringing attendees onto the Homewood campus. Prior poster is correct, and you are not. Again.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:Hopkins does not have 17000 grad students. It has 8,500, only 2000 of which are on the undergrad campus. There are roughly 6300 undergraduates at the Homewood campus, so they clearly dominate the campus. Some of you are allergic to facts. People pursuing online executive certificate programs are not graduate students nor are they on a campus.

You are wrong on so many levels. Presumably, you can read: 24000 grad students. The 17k is without the certificate programs.
Here’s the cite: https://oira.jhu.edu/graduate-enrollment-and-degrees/

Incidentally, grad enrollment has increased 50% the last 10 years…


There are still only 2000 graduate students at Homewood, Hopkins may count online executive program students as “graduate” students, but they still are not stepping foot on a campus.

No, there are not. Give a cite or go away. You keep repeating the same number with no cite. Your claim of 2/24k grad students at Homewood is off by several thousand. You said there were only 8,500 grad students and were shown there are 24k. Off by a magnitude of 3x. Cite was provided. Put up or shut up.


here you go moron:
“live and learn on our Homewood campus in North Baltimore, home to more than 5,000 undergrads and nearly 2,000 grad students”

https://www.jhu.edu/admissions/visit/

first paragraph. learn to do “research”

It’s 4k on Homewood. Full time. https://studentaffairs.jhu.edu/viceprovost/wp-content/uploads/sites/54/2021/09/Copy-of-FALL_2021_1.0-1-Enrollment-Report-by-Time-Status-Gender.pdf

Off by 100%. Here is an actual cite — maybe you can have someone count it for you. I said you were off by thousands — and you are.

And to the JHU worker, would be a shame if the federal cuts indirectly or directly impacted your job: you seem really competent.


Dp, full time doesn’t mean on campus. The engineering for professionals program for example, is not bringing attendees onto the Homewood campus. Prior poster is correct, and you are not. Again.

This is idiot school. “(Excl non-res).” Think real hard what that means. And the “engineering for non-professionals” — all 138 of them — were not included in the 4,000 count.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:Hopkins does not have 17000 grad students. It has 8,500, only 2000 of which are on the undergrad campus. There are roughly 6300 undergraduates at the Homewood campus, so they clearly dominate the campus. Some of you are allergic to facts. People pursuing online executive certificate programs are not graduate students nor are they on a campus.

You are wrong on so many levels. Presumably, you can read: 24000 grad students. The 17k is without the certificate programs.
Here’s the cite: https://oira.jhu.edu/graduate-enrollment-and-degrees/

Incidentally, grad enrollment has increased 50% the last 10 years…


There are still only 2000 graduate students at Homewood, Hopkins may count online executive program students as “graduate” students, but they still are not stepping foot on a campus.

No, there are not. Give a cite or go away. You keep repeating the same number with no cite. Your claim of 2/24k grad students at Homewood is off by several thousand. You said there were only 8,500 grad students and were shown there are 24k. Off by a magnitude of 3x. Cite was provided. Put up or shut up.


here you go moron:
“live and learn on our Homewood campus in North Baltimore, home to more than 5,000 undergrads and nearly 2,000 grad students”

https://www.jhu.edu/admissions/visit/

first paragraph. learn to do “research”

It’s 4k on Homewood. Full time. https://studentaffairs.jhu.edu/viceprovost/wp-content/uploads/sites/54/2021/09/Copy-of-FALL_2021_1.0-1-Enrollment-Report-by-Time-Status-Gender.pdf

Off by 100%. Here is an actual cite — maybe you can have someone count it for you. I said you were off by thousands — and you are.

And to the JHU worker, would be a shame if the federal cuts indirectly or directly impacted your job: you seem really competent.


Dp, full time doesn’t mean on campus. The engineering for professionals program for example, is not bringing attendees onto the Homewood campus. Prior poster is correct, and you are not. Again.



Don't bother. This poster many people are trying to correct is a complete lunatic. If the 2000k citation someone posted from the admissions office website doesn't convince them, nothing will. Fine, lunatic poster, you are right. There are tens of thousands of graduate students squatting on the Homewood campus. Materials scientists at JHU have cloaked them all with light bending cloth so they appear invisible to the naked eye.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:Hopkins does not have 17000 grad students. It has 8,500, only 2000 of which are on the undergrad campus. There are roughly 6300 undergraduates at the Homewood campus, so they clearly dominate the campus. Some of you are allergic to facts. People pursuing online executive certificate programs are not graduate students nor are they on a campus.

You are wrong on so many levels. Presumably, you can read: 24000 grad students. The 17k is without the certificate programs.
Here’s the cite: https://oira.jhu.edu/graduate-enrollment-and-degrees/

Incidentally, grad enrollment has increased 50% the last 10 years…


There are still only 2000 graduate students at Homewood, Hopkins may count online executive program students as “graduate” students, but they still are not stepping foot on a campus.

No, there are not. Give a cite or go away. You keep repeating the same number with no cite. Your claim of 2/24k grad students at Homewood is off by several thousand. You said there were only 8,500 grad students and were shown there are 24k. Off by a magnitude of 3x. Cite was provided. Put up or shut up.


here you go moron:
“live and learn on our Homewood campus in North Baltimore, home to more than 5,000 undergrads and nearly 2,000 grad students”

https://www.jhu.edu/admissions/visit/

first paragraph. learn to do “research”

It’s 4k on Homewood. Full time. https://studentaffairs.jhu.edu/viceprovost/wp-content/uploads/sites/54/2021/09/Copy-of-FALL_2021_1.0-1-Enrollment-Report-by-Time-Status-Gender.pdf

Off by 100%. Here is an actual cite — maybe you can have someone count it for you. I said you were off by thousands — and you are.

And to the JHU worker, would be a shame if the federal cuts indirectly or directly impacted your job: you seem really competent.


Dp, full time doesn’t mean on campus. The engineering for professionals program for example, is not bringing attendees onto the Homewood campus. Prior poster is correct, and you are not. Again.

This is idiot school. “(Excl non-res).” Think real hard what that means. And the “engineering for non-professionals” — all 138 of them — were not included in the 4,000 count.


So, a few days you were insisting that there were 17,000 grad students on campus, and now you are insisting 4000. Wrong then and wrong now. Correct number is 2000.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:Hopkins does not have 17000 grad students. It has 8,500, only 2000 of which are on the undergrad campus. There are roughly 6300 undergraduates at the Homewood campus, so they clearly dominate the campus. Some of you are allergic to facts. People pursuing online executive certificate programs are not graduate students nor are they on a campus.

You are wrong on so many levels. Presumably, you can read: 24000 grad students. The 17k is without the certificate programs.
Here’s the cite: https://oira.jhu.edu/graduate-enrollment-and-degrees/

Incidentally, grad enrollment has increased 50% the last 10 years…


There are still only 2000 graduate students at Homewood, Hopkins may count online executive program students as “graduate” students, but they still are not stepping foot on a campus.

No, there are not. Give a cite or go away. You keep repeating the same number with no cite. Your claim of 2/24k grad students at Homewood is off by several thousand. You said there were only 8,500 grad students and were shown there are 24k. Off by a magnitude of 3x. Cite was provided. Put up or shut up.


here you go moron:
“live and learn on our Homewood campus in North Baltimore, home to more than 5,000 undergrads and nearly 2,000 grad students”

https://www.jhu.edu/admissions/visit/

first paragraph. learn to do “research”

It’s 4k on Homewood. Full time. https://studentaffairs.jhu.edu/viceprovost/wp-content/uploads/sites/54/2021/09/Copy-of-FALL_2021_1.0-1-Enrollment-Report-by-Time-Status-Gender.pdf

Off by 100%. Here is an actual cite — maybe you can have someone count it for you. I said you were off by thousands — and you are.

And to the JHU worker, would be a shame if the federal cuts indirectly or directly impacted your job: you seem really competent.


Dp, full time doesn’t mean on campus. The engineering for professionals program for example, is not bringing attendees onto the Homewood campus. Prior poster is correct, and you are not. Again.

This is idiot school. “(Excl non-res).” Think real hard what that means. And the “engineering for non-professionals” — all 138 of them — were not included in the 4,000 count.


Engineering has a lot of full time online programs. Or maybe they don't. Maybe all the students who are supposedly online are hiding behind the bushes.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:Hopkins does not have 17000 grad students. It has 8,500, only 2000 of which are on the undergrad campus. There are roughly 6300 undergraduates at the Homewood campus, so they clearly dominate the campus. Some of you are allergic to facts. People pursuing online executive certificate programs are not graduate students nor are they on a campus.

You are wrong on so many levels. Presumably, you can read: 24000 grad students. The 17k is without the certificate programs.
Here’s the cite: https://oira.jhu.edu/graduate-enrollment-and-degrees/

Incidentally, grad enrollment has increased 50% the last 10 years…


There are still only 2000 graduate students at Homewood, Hopkins may count online executive program students as “graduate” students, but they still are not stepping foot on a campus.

No, there are not. Give a cite or go away. You keep repeating the same number with no cite. Your claim of 2/24k grad students at Homewood is off by several thousand. You said there were only 8,500 grad students and were shown there are 24k. Off by a magnitude of 3x. Cite was provided. Put up or shut up.


here you go moron:
“live and learn on our Homewood campus in North Baltimore, home to more than 5,000 undergrads and nearly 2,000 grad students”

https://www.jhu.edu/admissions/visit/

first paragraph. learn to do “research”

It’s 4k on Homewood. Full time. https://studentaffairs.jhu.edu/viceprovost/wp-content/uploads/sites/54/2021/09/Copy-of-FALL_2021_1.0-1-Enrollment-Report-by-Time-Status-Gender.pdf

Off by 100%. Here is an actual cite — maybe you can have someone count it for you. I said you were off by thousands — and you are.

And to the JHU worker, would be a shame if the federal cuts indirectly or directly impacted your job: you seem really competent.


Dp, full time doesn’t mean on campus. The engineering for professionals program for example, is not bringing attendees onto the Homewood campus. Prior poster is correct, and you are not. Again.



Don't bother. This poster many people are trying to correct is a complete lunatic. If the 2000k citation someone posted from the admissions office website doesn't convince them, nothing will. Fine, lunatic poster, you are right. There are tens of thousands of graduate students squatting on the Homewood campus. Materials scientists at JHU have cloaked them all with light bending cloth so they appear invisible to the naked eye.


Ha, ha, probably true, I should know better than to argue with an obvious troll.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:Hopkins does not have 17000 grad students. It has 8,500, only 2000 of which are on the undergrad campus. There are roughly 6300 undergraduates at the Homewood campus, so they clearly dominate the campus. Some of you are allergic to facts. People pursuing online executive certificate programs are not graduate students nor are they on a campus.

You are wrong on so many levels. Presumably, you can read: 24000 grad students. The 17k is without the certificate programs.
Here’s the cite: https://oira.jhu.edu/graduate-enrollment-and-degrees/

Incidentally, grad enrollment has increased 50% the last 10 years…


There are still only 2000 graduate students at Homewood, Hopkins may count online executive program students as “graduate” students, but they still are not stepping foot on a campus.

No, there are not. Give a cite or go away. You keep repeating the same number with no cite. Your claim of 2/24k grad students at Homewood is off by several thousand. You said there were only 8,500 grad students and were shown there are 24k. Off by a magnitude of 3x. Cite was provided. Put up or shut up.


here you go moron:
“live and learn on our Homewood campus in North Baltimore, home to more than 5,000 undergrads and nearly 2,000 grad students”

https://www.jhu.edu/admissions/visit/

first paragraph. learn to do “research”

It’s 4k on Homewood. Full time. https://studentaffairs.jhu.edu/viceprovost/wp-content/uploads/sites/54/2021/09/Copy-of-FALL_2021_1.0-1-Enrollment-Report-by-Time-Status-Gender.pdf

Off by 100%. Here is an actual cite — maybe you can have someone count it for you. I said you were off by thousands — and you are.

And to the JHU worker, would be a shame if the federal cuts indirectly or directly impacted your job: you seem really competent.


I mean, do the JHU workers really have to worry about funding cuts? Or is the 17,000-member stealth graduate student horde the real danger?
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:It’s an intense environment that I wouldn’t want my kid to be in but if your kid thrives in that kind of environment…

That intense environment is pervasive — nary a classroom is empty when class is not in session. Just room after room of grinders, grinding. DC took it off the list.


This comes up very often as a negative for certain elite schools. I'm not sure what the arguments is unless it's for an easy A. I want my scientists, doctors, and engineers to have actually worked hard in a competitive environment and risen to the top.


This. I don't understand why people have an issue with these "intense" environments. The kids who apply to these schools obviously know about how academically intense they are- JHU, MIT, CalTech, Princeton, etc. It's a good thing for society to have people who thrive in these environments. These are going to be the best of the best in the medical, engineering, CS fields; and why wouldn't we want people like that. Just because the rest of us can't relate, it doesn't mean it's a bad thing.


Agreed. I think it would be doing prospective students a disservice to claim that JHU and is laid back. Yes, there is an element of intensity. Whether that is a bad thing really depends on the student, their ability level, and their organizational skills. Some students thrive in such environments, and if so, Hopkins is a great place to be with plenty of hands-on, cutting edge research experience for those who want it and are willing to work for it.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:It’s an intense environment that I wouldn’t want my kid to be in but if your kid thrives in that kind of environment…

That intense environment is pervasive — nary a classroom is empty when class is not in session. Just room after room of grinders, grinding. DC took it off the list.


This comes up very often as a negative for certain elite schools. I'm not sure what the arguments is unless it's for an easy A. I want my scientists, doctors, and engineers to have actually worked hard in a competitive environment and risen to the top.


This. I don't understand why people have an issue with these "intense" environments. The kids who apply to these schools obviously know about how academically intense they are- JHU, MIT, CalTech, Princeton, etc. It's a good thing for society to have people who thrive in these environments. These are going to be the best of the best in the medical, engineering, CS fields; and why wouldn't we want people like that. Just because the rest of us can't relate, it doesn't mean it's a bad thing.


Agreed. I think it would be doing prospective students a disservice to claim that JHU and is laid back. Yes, there is an element of intensity. Whether that is a bad thing really depends on the student, their ability level, and their organizational skills. Some students thrive in such environments, and if so, Hopkins is a great place to be with plenty of hands-on, cutting edge research experience for those who want it and are willing to work for it.


From our tour: Premed kids start lab research in freshman year. Double major is common. Studying in library until midnight, but it's safe on campus walking back to the dorm. Kids are collaborative rather than competitive.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:Hopkins does not have 17000 grad students. It has 8,500, only 2000 of which are on the undergrad campus. There are roughly 6300 undergraduates at the Homewood campus, so they clearly dominate the campus. Some of you are allergic to facts. People pursuing online executive certificate programs are not graduate students nor are they on a campus.

You are wrong on so many levels. Presumably, you can read: 24000 grad students. The 17k is without the certificate programs.
Here’s the cite: https://oira.jhu.edu/graduate-enrollment-and-degrees/

Incidentally, grad enrollment has increased 50% the last 10 years…


There are still only 2000 graduate students at Homewood, Hopkins may count online executive program students as “graduate” students, but they still are not stepping foot on a campus.

No, there are not. Give a cite or go away. You keep repeating the same number with no cite. Your claim of 2/24k grad students at Homewood is off by several thousand. You said there were only 8,500 grad students and were shown there are 24k. Off by a magnitude of 3x. Cite was provided. Put up or shut up.


here you go moron:
“live and learn on our Homewood campus in North Baltimore, home to more than 5,000 undergrads and nearly 2,000 grad students”

https://www.jhu.edu/admissions/visit/

first paragraph. learn to do “research”

It’s 4k on Homewood. Full time. https://studentaffairs.jhu.edu/viceprovost/wp-content/uploads/sites/54/2021/09/Copy-of-FALL_2021_1.0-1-Enrollment-Report-by-Time-Status-Gender.pdf

Off by 100%. Here is an actual cite — maybe you can have someone count it for you. I said you were off by thousands — and you are.

And to the JHU worker, would be a shame if the federal cuts indirectly or directly impacted your job: you seem really competent.


imagine being such a twat to wish ill will on others. dont worry, they will always be more successful than your pathetic ass excuse of a human being

i wish bell hooks fans as yourself only the best


dont worry you’ll always be less successful than most hopkins grads. pathetic
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