I wouldn't personally want UM, because of its weather, but agree here. For a kid who doesn't mind or even loves the cold, it sounds pretty ideal. Also, the network is huge. Duke and Stanford as well. |
Fine school, but that is probably true. |
Northeastern? Bucknell? |
What about uc berkley. That’s probably the best in terms of academics and intellectual vitality. |
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+10000 |
Agree. |
+1 Nice school, crappy Baltimore, but not a dream school. |
DC doesn’t have a dream school but MIT is definitely top 5. Along with Stanford Princeton Caltech and maybe Yale. |
replace UCLA with USC |
That’s nice, but inaccurate. Sorry your preference isn’t in agreement with the data. |
Virtually every program it offers is top 5-10 in the country. Most other state flagships do not have that kind of across the board excellence. Not a Michigan person, but seriously, look it up. Add to it the winning sports culture and school spirit and anyone can understand why it would be a desirable place to spend 4 years. |
There is always perception vs. reality with Berkeley. |
There is pretty good research on this topic by Harvard, U Penn and Boston College professors.
A Revealed Preference Ranking of U.S. Colleges and Universities. https://www.nber.org/papers/w10803 |
I am not surprised by students wanting Michigan and UCLA. I am surprised by the inclusion of NYU and Columbia. We toured Columbia and it seemed depressing and stressful and unhappy. And NYU seemed very cold, like it mostly functions as a pied-a-terre for rich kids who want to live in the Village. But I guess the draw of NYC is very appealing to 18 year olds. |