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We visited during a college swing through Michigan, Illinois, Ohio and Indiana.
Was pretty rural and felt large and concrete. Students we encountered seemed happy and obvs a lot of majors to choose from. Long distance from one end (N/S or E/W) of campus to another and tour guide discussed scheduling classes carefully with passing period time in mind. Lots of biking and scootering across campus. |
| Go Green! Spartans have a good network and alums are friendly |
Nope. Nor Wisconsin, Minnesota, Iowa, marquette, Butler or any other decent sized non elite Midwest school. I went to one and loved it and am encouraging my kids to apply to some. But that’s the culture, getting together to enjoy food, beer and sports. |
PP said WESTERN Michigan. Read again. |
I mean, that sounds great, seriously. |
| My DH is from the state and while he went to UMich his siblings went to Michigan State. They have all been successful but the main difference is the siblings have stayed in the Midwest. |
I think it's that and a lot more. These large schools will have a hippy component, nerdy academics, people who love sitting around coffeehouses or doing outdoorsy stuff on weekends, or all of the above including sports. Pretty much something for everybody. |
| I went here as a chemistry major and it was heavily Chinese. I did not make a single friend through classes or my lab job. I ended up taking a second part time job at the local mall which became my social outlet, and took some foreign language classes just to see different faces. The business and education majors seemed to have WAY more fun than the STEM crowd. Their classes were always at the good times while I would have organic chemistry lab at 6 pm on Friday. |
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I’m a Michigan State grad and I grew up in the Northeast. I chose it because I loved the campus, sports and community, particularly the Midwest vibe. Having spent my childhood on the east coast, I wanted college to be more down to earth with nicer kids, less superficial. I found it at MSU vs schools that pulled a lot from the east coast at the time (Wisconsin, Indiana, certainly Michigan).
Things may have changed now since MSU is pulling more OOS kids. College was incredible and I moved to New York right after graduation. |
I am an MSU alum and I think it's an easy admit only for certain majors. Not for pre-med or engineering. They are pretty competitive. |
| I know 3 MSU grads — all very successfu. |
Michigan MBA here. Came from MoCo, remained after grad school. Quality of life is probably better here than in DMV IF you have a stable job and you don't mind colder weather. For a person who is very mainstream, American suburbia is the same everywhere. If you live in Gaithersburg or Reston and never go to downtown DC, you might as well live here. With 50% out of state and a way more global mindset, the University of Michigan produces more alumni who will disperse. But I know a bunch of international students who have gone to MSU and done quite well afterward. It's the locals who like to stay home. MSU is easier to get into than Michigan but offers merit and perks to honors students that are more generous than Michigan. 2024 had peak Michigan admission for our high school. In 2025, MSU struck back and took most of the stars using big dollar scholarships. It definitely can be a fun place for mainstream kids. And most MC and UMC people are what I consider mainstream. I work with and am friends with many MSU grads. These are people who are well-compensated professionals...engineers, MBAs, etc. There really isn't any difference between Michigan and MSU-educated people in the workforce. Regarding Midwest culture, I think a good parallel would be Penn State minus the Philly, Jersey, and Metro NYC kids. But Midwest Nice is real. People are much more circumspect. It's not as okay to disagree with others or have a forceful display of intellect or disagreement. The norms are different here vs. other places I've lived. My biggest issue with MSU is the chip on the shoulder that MSU kids have vs. Michigan. The sporting rivalry is obnoxious (although many people think such rivalries are really fun, I find that kind of banter eye-pokingly tedious). And there's no question that Michigan is harder to get into. So that creates ill will among in-state high school classmates...which hardens people's feelings about which school is snobby and which school is fun, etc. I actually think out-of-staters might not feel that very deeply. I definitely recommend that DMV people take a look if they are traveling to the area on college tours. And I agree MSU fits in the competitive set with other large Midwest flagships. Why not check it out? They have a pretty well-organized honors college day where kids compete for scholarships onsite. |
| It's a great school. Beautiful campus. Nice Midwestern culture. |
Which are? Clueless even though lived there for YEARS. |
Dear OP, I mean this kindly. You HAVE to become a more sophisticated consumer for your kid. Every single college out there is marketing to get your money. Every single Ao is going to be charming. Every school will present itself as a Dream School. You must start reading, watching podcasts, and learning from others. Do not fall for the endless crap that every single school presents. Start from the beginning. What can your family realistically afford, acknowledging that some schools are now $99K a year (USC I'm looking at you); what are your in-state options? What are your kids' interests? major? size of school? planned activities? Then start an affordable list of safeties, targets, and reaches to go to the tour. |