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There are a lot of rich kids at all the top schools. Who do you think is making the donations and paying full freight?
It's the tradeoff. |
Seriously, this board has a strain of very low brow women that view college as a means to party and find a husband or want their sons to be a finance bro that gets by purely on Greek connections. |
That's a weird take. No, I have well-adjusted smart kids (mine aren't STEM) who are looking for a true collegiate experience - some variation of the sports, bars, Greek or similar. That means a vibrant social life outside the library. It's a given they will be studying. But college is so much more than academics and your major (while important). What did you think holistic admissions was all about? |
We were not always “moms” |
| Duke is Duke but is losing some of its uniqueness by admitting too many non Dukies. |
+1 |
| ND has been all of that and more for my son. Very social and happy kids. yes, S. Bend is lame as a city, but the students at ND truly make the most of campus/dorm life. And honestly the campus is amazing! Just bc there isn't Greek doesn't mean it's not social. |
That doesn't matter at all at the better schools with their multi-billion dollar endowments. More important for them is getting the best students who are likely to become influential and prominent two decades later. Princeton etc doesn't give a damn about your full pay tuition check. It funds the coffee, maybe. Meanwhile, getting that brilliant middle class student on aid gets them a $100 million donation twenty years later. It's only the very middling private schools that need the full pay money to get through the year. |
| UVA not a T20 |
This is a question of preference. My Ivy and T20 kids didn't even apply to Princeton. Wrong vibe for us. But I went to a T10 and to a top law school. Same with my spouse. The college isn't going to determine all that much for our kids. I'd rather they be happy. Social happiness is just as important as academic happiness. |
Also a Duke 90s grad. My friends and I all did interesting things outside the classroom, including Greek life, but we each had an interest or activity or two, not the "do it all" / resume-building approach of high-achievers of this generation. Yes, the academics were difficult at times, but there was a real sense of balance between working hard, going out, and watching all the games during basketball season.
What schools are currently like Duke in the 90s? Vandy? Wake? What schools would you say have the mindset and culture that Duke did when we were |
How would you describe the Princeton vibe? DC didn't love it, but we suspect they were partially intfluenced by an uncle who felt a bit like a fish out of water there 30 years ago. |
| Vandy, Wake, ND, USC, UVA, BC |
+1 The late teens and early 20s are a huge growth window for social and emotional development. You know, the stuff that makes a person human. While I certainly don't think bars or Greek life or drinking are necessary for college students to develop deep social relationships, I do think they tend to attract students who plan to invest a lot in their friendships and the college community as a whole, in addition to their studies, of course. That's not the right fit for all kids of families. Which is why different T20 schools offer different types of environments and cultures. To each their own. |
| Duke, Penn, Vandy, Michigan, ND, maybe Dartmouth |