Washu, Emory, JHU, Case, Rochester, Tulane |
quite wrong. It's a mom. but continue being a bully by all means. |
What does this mean? Who’s back? If you’re trying to be funny, you are failing miserably. |
then you should have used that money to let them go to ivy+ the opportunities are much better, jobs/law/MD/phD... |
you should never go to these for premed if you get into any of the T15/ivy with a med school on or close to campus. The latter are much better for premed. |
Our bar was any private T20/ivy or WAS. there is more to the education at these top places than exact ROI. |
Which is why "s/he" was used. We can all recite your posts verbatim by now.
|
DP. Ha, no way. Not when we have excellent publics in our own state. You do you. |
You know nothing about premed. |
What happens if the one you are going dropped the ranking to T21 next year? Or dropped to T25? |
You were on a roll until you said "Outside of HYPMS" They are nothing special and they only open more doors in a few professions. The second part of your comment is the right thinking though I have no idea what a "Premed" school is and for the best overall undergraduate education outside of Engineering and CS you go to a top SLAC, not HYPMS. |
Go to a top SLAC, study Math, Neuro, Bio, etc. and you will have better results. The top SLACs typically have success rates above of 80-90+% for committee recommended kids and the kids get the individual attention necessary to succeed. You can also get similar results at a very small number of universities JHU, Case, MIT but it is the exception not the norm. |
They aren't, especially in the case of CWRU. |
Yes they are special. Nobody would turn them down to go to a top slac. Not Sorry you did not get in. |
| Our DD is interested in social sciences and will likely attend an LAC. The cost is a gut punch, but I see value in the "learning to learn" skills that I see supported in the LAC's as well as the social fit. I think it depends on your kid - some kids have a very strong sense of self heading off to college and will find their way and their people in a large public setting. Our DD is a "social chameleon" type, and I think the setting she spends the next four years in will strongly influence who she becomes as she matures. She has brought this up with us too, and is looking for a school where the majority of the students seem to be demonstrating habits and ways of living that she would like to foster for herself. This has come down to LAC's where deeper academic discussions and accountability in classes are the norm, studying is part of most students' daily routine, and appreciation of nature and outdoors activities is common. I don't know if there will be a financial ROI out of the LAC choice for her, but the potential for personal development alongside the education feels worth it to us. |