| No idea. Visited a few years back. Didn’t like even one thing about it. |
Everyone’s different. When I visited as a high school junior in the late 80s I fell in love with Penn the moment I stepped foot on campus. To me at least, College Green was an oasis in the city. Applied ED and got in (it was easier back then), and spent four great years there. |
| It has the best alumni. The best. No other alumni like it. You’d be amazed. |
| My son and many of his friends want to work in finance or on Wall Street. Wharton is how they think they can get there. |
Congrats to your kid - glad they like it and sounds like it's going well. To answer your question (which feels unnecessarily judgmental), early in the college search process we visited a variety of types of schools and this was how they learned they didn't like urban schools. Penn was an early batch of the Philly area schools. But also, DC was open minded enough and ended up at what they consider a school that is more urban than they want...but they looked past that because there were other plusses. So it's not as black and white obvious as you suggest. There are many different facets to a college and DC realized that to fully discount a university for being urban is short sighted, and that some schools were still worth applying to. Would they have preferred to go to the less urban one at the top of their list - sure - but they didn't get accepted. |
Judgmental? You said your kid “hated” it and BTW, they don’t like urban campuses. Seems obvious to me that one extremely simple way to narrow a college search is to decide the type of campus environment you want…which still leaves you with 100 schools. For any campus environment you want, you have tons of good choices…there is nothing shortsighted about making your college search more efficient. |
Nice! "Then they asked me, with tears in their eyes, sir..." |
| As a Jewish person, I thought Penn was largely for Jewish kids from the east coast? |
Isn't Columbia the one that always took Jewish students in? To my understanding, Columbia never discriminated Jewish students in 1920s, 1930s... |
The overall acceptance rate was 40% in the 80s, ED would be higher. "[E]asier back then" is such an understatement. |
Some people just like crime, roaches, & ugly campuses. |
| Who is bumping all these old posts? Is it same people trying to sow discord with the “is this anyone’s first choice” posts? |
| This thread is 2 yrs old why are you restarting it? Lemme guess must be the same poster who hates on various ivies or chicago, or wasHU and Emory. |
| In a city, ivy, best business school, pre professional culture, and good social culture. |
Thanks to person occupying white house? |