Forum Index
»
College and University Discussion
+1 If they weren’t jealous of the SEC they wouldn’t be on this thread. |
Morning Joe's Joe Scarborough's kids all went to SEC colleges. Is he a white trash whisperer, too? |
Yet your trash President's kid went North. In fact, all of those losers did. He's your King, right? His kids were not top admits? |
Keep making wrong assumptions about me, you’re embarrassing yourself. I vote blue. |
A Wharton kid is not the same as a kid with a Penn bachelor's. Nobody in real life is impressed by a random schmuck with a Penn bachelor's. If you put two girls in front of hiring managers with the same degree, same GPA, same resume, one is a cute outgoing sorority girl from SMU and the other is a typical neurotic dweeb from Penn, you think the Penn dweeb has an edge? You're very naive. |
| I don’t think either side is particularly jealous of the other. Extremely different, so you prefer one or the other. Thankfully with admissions in the era of shotgunning not everyone likes the same things. One thing is clear though, the Ivy/elite students could choose, the others couldn’t. |
Who TF cares where Tucker Carlson and Joe Scarborough’s kids went to school? Are you serious with this? |
|
Ivies are not out but most people would put Stanford and MIT ahead of all ivy except maybe Harvard.
Duke probably ahead of all but HYP. Schoola like Emory, Vanderbilt, UNC, Florida, UVA, GaTech, pretty will regarded. Lord of the Southern second tier schools are more attractive than schools in Northeast. I didn't know why people even go to northeastern anymore. |
For the very tiny percentage of students in the northeast who are more or less assured of an Ivy admission, of course they are not considering Alabama. But many will look at Vanderbilt, Duke, and Rice in the South. And Chicago and Northwestern and even Notre Dame in the Midwest. And Stanford and CalTech on the West Coast. Alabama is not the right comparison. But generally, the southern state schools are far better than public schools in the northeast. And there are gazillions of students in NY and New England who will happily choose Texas-Austin, UVA, Georgia Tech, UNC-Chapel Hill, Florida, or Georgia over Rhode Island or UConn or SUNY in the northeast - if they can get in. Duke, Vanderbilt, and Rice aren't trying to be Ivy League schools. They all have very strong identities. They don't need the Ivy League and are doing just fine. And increasingly, students prefer them over many of the Ivy schools. But more importantly, the southern publics are almost all universally better than their counterparts in the northeast. So you get both a better education and a better experience down South. And for the 90 percent of families that are price sensitive, the southern publics are a much better value than the vast majority of schools in the northeast. The Ivies have the advantage of history. But other than that, the northeast has dropped the ball in public education. Every other region - the south, the midwest, the mountain west, the west coast - does it better. You only have one chance to go to college. Outside of HYPM, and BU, BC, NYU, and Tufts, why would you want to go to a university in the northeast? They are generally very middling, expensive, cold, grey, and often depressing. |
| For all the people saying why would you want to go to a school in the northeast, they are just as confused why anyone would choose the south. People are different, no one’s changing anyone else’s mind. |
The same can be said for the upper Midwest - which is far bleaker weather and geography and where no talented kid wants to live after college. (At least Acela corridor still has booming job centers.) Why would anyone go to Wisconsin, Michigan or Indiana over Alabama, UGA or Clemson? |
Because then they’d have to go Alabama. |
Is there a reason you're struggling so much with reality? It's been a few decades since you were rejected from Penn. |
| Have done a few tours and info sessions for SLACs in NE with my kid (I’m from NE myself). The NE students don’t look or sound nearly as happy as those in the south—the weather is cold, the campuses are small, there’s less diversity, the “elite status” has waned due to who they’re admitting. Not to mention how the progressive ideology seems to really affect the vibe. |
+1, people here are a bit delusional. No Harvard grad is pleading to go to South Carolina |