+1 However, if children are willing to explore, the city provides a wealth of resources. Additionally, the cultural stimulation is a significant advantage. |
Is Syracuse a dump? |
Very. This is why I had no desire to go to umcp. |
God yes |
Hamilton |
We love small setup, and are loving Meadville having great local restaurants and the Market House, the oldest continuously-run market structure in the state of Pennsylvania! |
Could u restate this so mere humans can grasp it? |
I agree |
My oldest absolutely wanted a big city. So it was important to him. |
The student is spending 4 years in this town, so hopefully there are enough amenities, job opportunities, services etc to satisfy their needs. |
+1 This is how both of my kids feel as well, and chose schools accordingly. And actually, how I felt back in my college days. Loved tiny town living. No desire whatsoever to be in or near a big city. |
DP. Serious question: why are you so triggered? |
Kids from the DMV are often spoiled (and or the product of piece of work parents), and notwithstanding the educational opportunities many won't consider a college in a place that doesn't offer everything they're used to in Bethesda or McLean and expect to return to. There are also some DMV parents who push their kids to go to school in a place that's fun for them to visit (because that's truly important). In the rest of the world, it probably depends on the student. Although honestly a college student should be able to adjust to any place as long as it provides at least a CVS, a supermarket, and a cheap place to eat with friends (this is college -- it's not really necessary that it be a Bloomingdales, a Whole Foods and a Michelin-starred restaurant). By and large, college graduates don't end up in small isolated communities (unless that's their preference), so spending four years there for college can be an interesting opportunity to test themselves in a different environment for a relatively brief period (is life without Thai food and Starbucks even possible?) But obviously expanding their range of experiences isn't what some of what these DMV families want from college. |
My school was in a “city” but you needed a car to get to anything off of campus. It was fine, though-most of what we needed was on our self contained campus. We left campus to go to superk (Target wasn’t around yet), the movies, the mall and the occasional meal at Olive Garden/IHOP/etc. Parties were on campus for the most part - there was one dive bar where bands would play not far from campus, so I went there every once in a while.
My daughter really likes a small school in MA that is in a cute small town with commuter rail access to Boston. It is basically suburbia, but I think she will likely do most stuff on campus or right nearby. But if they want, kids can very cheaply get in and out of Boston-the train station is just steps from campus. |