| Is there any sports scene at all there? |
| Where's our best friend U Chicago troll? I can't believe she hasn't posted 10x on this thread about ED 0, $6 billion debt, and bottom 25% of the class private school kids. |
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I have a kid at Chicago and a good friend who went there in the 90s. I think it has changed alot but as one of the previous posters said it seems now to be a mix: a good dose of nerdy kids who could care less about the sports scene and spend weekends going to indie movies or lectures or students performances or Chinatown not frat parties. There are a few who are at the library all weekend. And then there is the party scene. And some do a bit of each. It seems like most kids find a crowd...but I'm sure some want something different. Chicago does still hangs on to its identity as the free speech/core curriculum/serious scholar school, at least for the moment.
I suspect Vanderbilt has a mix of kids and scenes too. |
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UChicago today is a very different institution than 15 years ago. I don't think the old "where fun goes to die" and "awkward nerd" stereotype still applies.
They've aggressively targeted kids from prestigious private schools, oftentimes taking 15-20+ kids annually from places like Andover/Exeter/Choate/Horace Mann, etc. This has resulted in a far more socially polished and culturally elite student body than they've historically had. These are the sorts of kids that dominated the Ivies in the 80's/90's and that the Ivies now shun for "equity" reasons. |
These people are prestige whores, nothing more. They noted the USNWR ranking and their $$counselor is showing them how to strategize Kid goes to vandy and his best friend to Chicago. Very different environments. Very |
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Vanderbilt tends to self-select for a lot of "smart, but social" kids who play down their intelligence and care about campus popularity. However, this has changed sooooo much at Vanderbilt, and it's no longer the southern party playpen it was in the early 2000s. The student body at Vandy is more similar to the Ivies/UChicago than in previous eras, because it has aggressively courted super-high scorers (35+ ACT, 1560+ SAT) with the goal of boosting their reputation.
UChicago has also transformed because they've gone after the social elites at top private day and boarding schools. Look at the matriculation data at any top private school, and you'll see 30+ UChicago vs maybe 10 at HYPS over a 5 year span. Choate has 63 UChicago matriculants over the past 5 years. They're probably more similar than you think, but Vandy has the school spirit edge because of their D1 sports programs. |
Vanderbilt's student body is not similar to Ivies. 395 students submitted an SAT score, of which only 99 have an SAT 1560 or above. Vanderbilt 1,635 freshman 99 have SAT 1560 or above 6% of freshman class Harvard 1,641 freshman 446 have SAT 1560 or above 27% of freshman class Yale 1,633 freshman 289 have SAT 1560 or above 17% of freshman class Princeton 1,404 freshman 212 have SAT 1560 or above 15% of freshman class |
Accurate description of Chicago these days |
There’s no effective difference between a 1500 and 1560 |
HYP would disagree. |
This is misleading. Another 25% or so of admitted students at Vandy submit the ACT, with a median of 35. Yes, not the same as the test mandatory Ivies, but about a quarter of class has a 35/1550 or above. |
How would you define “culturally elite”? |
NP I completely agree with this. From our feeder private (the kind this board hates: 30%+ to T10 outside of DMV), the savvy, well groomed, full pay B+/A- kids are headed to U Chicago, the brilliant but awkward 3.95 kids (no one gets all As at our school), a fair amount scholarship kids and first gens are headed to HYP. If I have to bet, the 2nd group will graduate and eventually work as researchers, academia, community leaders/in non profits or similar while the first group graduate to work on Wall Street/ go into consulting. The 2nd group are smart and driven too, but they know how to network, not spend too much time studying and still make good grades (though not top grades). Based on who I see admitted, U Chicago may get higher donations per alumni donor from this new crop of admits at least from our n=1 small private school. I can totally see the HYP first-gen kids come back to teach at our school whereas the U Chicago kids will come back to buy our school for their private equity firms. |
These are a lot of assumptions to draw based on the small dataset of kids from one high school. This pattern is different at my kids’ school, where the ivy kids are mostly very polished and preprofessional and often very athletic. |
From what I have heard about UC, there are a ton of really wealthy international students there, as well as a ton of really wealthy US kids, which can affect the social scene, good and bad, for kids from normal backgrounds. |