Is this still the prevailing reality at UChicago - where "fun goes to die"?

Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:Chicago is a great school, ivy-level in quality of peers land reputation with jobs and grad/professional schools. Plenty of fun and plenty of serious academics


plenty of fun? LOL


Yes? Clearly you haven’t visited recently nor do you have a kid there. It’s not Bama but it’s very very similar to the social scene at Yale. I have kids at both Chicago and Yale.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:Chicago is a great school, ivy-level in quality of peers land reputation with jobs and grad/professional schools. Plenty of fun and plenty of serious academics


plenty of fun? LOL


Yes? Clearly you haven’t visited recently nor do you have a kid there. It’s not Bama but it’s very very similar to the social scene at Yale. I have kids at both Chicago and Yale.


Exactly, we are not comparing UChicago to SEC rara, to some, that's cringe tbh. We are talking apples to apples.
Anonymous
The reality is no D3 school is going to be “fun” the way it’s traditionally applied to the college experience. The student body could care less about any sports, only kind of paying attention if say the basketball team makes the D3 playoffs.

So, the question is what is the “funnest” D3 school?
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:Chicago is a great school, ivy-level in quality of peers land reputation with jobs and grad/professional schools. Plenty of fun and plenty of serious academics


plenty of fun? LOL


Yes? Clearly you haven’t visited recently nor do you have a kid there. It’s not Bama but it’s very very similar to the social scene at Yale. I have kids at both Chicago and Yale.


Funny, the only school my U Chicago kid would have turned down Chicago for was Yale. I do think there's an overlap in the culture. And by the way, if you don't think Yale admits scores of uber-wealthy private school kids, I have a bridge to sell you.
Anonymous
Horrible alumni network and never had school spirit. Div3 sports.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:Horrible alumni network and never had school spirit. Div3 sports.


You couldn’t be more wrong.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:you can find the rigorous academics and BETTER quality of life at other schools.


What the heck is this supposed to mean?? Beautiful campus, 20 mins from major city, top notch, challenging academics, like-minded intellectual kids with international reach. Go to your SEC with the bros and bras and live and let live already. 30A is calling.


Try 10 minutes. UChicago is generally (traffic permitting) a 10 minute drive from the museum campus and Millenium park/Michigan Ave, etc.

It is a solid hour to get to Evanston/Northwestern so I’m not sure how much socializing goes on between the schools. They feel very far apart. Lifelong Chicagoan here.


More than you would think given the distance. Chicago parent. The frats & sororities do a lot of mixers between schools.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:you can find the rigorous academics and BETTER quality of life at other schools.


What the heck is this supposed to mean?? Beautiful campus, 20 mins from major city, top notch, challenging academics, like-minded intellectual kids with international reach. Go to your SEC with the bros and bras and live and let live already. 30A is calling.


Try 10 minutes. UChicago is generally (traffic permitting) a 10 minute drive from the museum campus and Millenium park/Michigan Ave, etc.

It is a solid hour to get to Evanston/Northwestern so I’m not sure how much socializing goes on between the schools. They feel very far apart. Lifelong Chicagoan here.


More than you would think given the distance. Chicago parent. The frats & sororities do a lot of mixers between schools.


I love to hear that. We were just at Northwestern. Had a wonderful weekend. Easy 30 minute Uber ride to downtown.
Anonymous
I went to UChicago and my best friend went to Northwestern. 2010s. We had a lot of fun together every weekend.
Anonymous
UChicago is a top notch graduate school, and I'm proud my dad got his PhD in economics there and had a few good friends go to the law school.

At DD's school, it seems like Northwestern became more popular for undergrad. Maybe they like the fact that you get to go to a safe, suburban campus and then when you want you can venture into the city to enjoy what Chicago has to offer. Maybe was seen as "more fun" that UChi for awhile?
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:UChicago is a top notch graduate school, and I'm proud my dad got his PhD in economics there and had a few good friends go to the law school.

At DD's school, it seems like Northwestern became more popular for undergrad. Maybe they like the fact that you get to go to a safe, suburban campus and then when you want you can venture into the city to enjoy what Chicago has to offer. Maybe was seen as "more fun" that UChi for awhile?


Yes, UChicago has been actively trying to work against their “where fun goes to die” reputation as it negatively affects the school by turning away applicants and decreasing yield.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:UChicago is a top notch graduate school, and I'm proud my dad got his PhD in economics there and had a few good friends go to the law school.

At DD's school, it seems like Northwestern became more popular for undergrad. Maybe they like the fact that you get to go to a safe, suburban campus and then when you want you can venture into the city to enjoy what Chicago has to offer. Maybe was seen as "more fun" that UChi for awhile?


Yes, UChicago has been actively trying to work against their “where fun goes to die” reputation as it negatively affects the school by turning away applicants and decreasing yield.


No worries. By getting middle of the pack private school students ED0 through ED3, I am certain it will positively affects the reputation.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:UChicago is a top notch graduate school, and I'm proud my dad got his PhD in economics there and had a few good friends go to the law school.

At DD's school, it seems like Northwestern became more popular for undergrad. Maybe they like the fact that you get to go to a safe, suburban campus and then when you want you can venture into the city to enjoy what Chicago has to offer. Maybe was seen as "more fun" that UChi for awhile?


Yes, UChicago has been actively trying to work against their “where fun goes to die” reputation as it negatively affects the school by turning away applicants and decreasing yield.


No worries. By getting middle of the pack private school students ED0 through ED3, I am certain it will positively affects the reputation.


I understand how frustrating it must be to have your kid rejected from UChicago.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:This is an n=1 experience but my DD is a sophomore at UChicago and absolutely loves it. She is a mainstream, maybe “trendy,” social person, and has found her people. She’s in a sorority, and goes out frequently to frat parties, mixers, and restaurants/bars/clubs in downtown Chicago. She’s doesn’t do that every week of course, especially during exams, but more frequently than the “where fun goes to die” motto would make one assume. Beyond social life, she has loved all her classes and admires her professors, who are often very very esteemed and accomplished but humble and always willing to talk to students. I think the student demographics of UChicago in 2026 are a closer match to peer schools compared to 1990, even the 2000s and 2010s.


My dd is heading there in the fall and aspires to be like this student.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:I realize this article is 5 years old, but is this still the reality at UChicago?

For Better or Worse, You Are UChicago

The instinct to distance oneself from the slurry of stereotypes that circulate campus is powerful—however, doing so only makes life harder.
By Manya Bharadwaj
September 8, 2021

It’s no surprise that the University of Chicago, with its self-proclaimed motto of being a place “where fun goes to die,” has so many miserable students. One source even shows that we had the eighth most depressed student body in the United States in 2019. Students here love to complain, and while students at other colleges do so as well, there’s something different about the conversations that we have. They’re less tongue in cheek and more resigned, frustrated, and bitter.

Many cite academic rigor as the main culprit. This is certainly a tough school (in fact, UChicago was recognized as the fifth-toughest college in the country in 2017). But any student who committed to this place knew what they were getting into. We did it either because we knew we could handle the toughness or because it was something we wanted from our college experience. Other schools of comparable difficulty on that list such as Princeton or Georgetown don’t have the same reputation for misery that we do, so I don’t think the academic difficulty is responsible for the cynicism that is so predominant on this campus. Rather, I think it’s often because of something a little more overlooked: the lack of togetherness in our student body. From what I’ve observed, the unflattering stereotypes that students have of one another are responsible for a certain sense of divisiveness in the community, fueling disdain for the school rather than pride. It’s a form of deep-rooted pessimism that’s fueling a fundamentally disjointed, unhappy environment.

UChicago students don’t seem to like one another—or at least the idea of what they represent. This school has so many student stereotypes that are each considered emblematic of a core aspect of the University, and these aren’t generally positive, which breeds a distaste for the school itself. One common example: With economics being our most popular major comes the archetype of the econ/finance bro, and this character tends to be disliked most by students who hate UChicago for being what they describe as a cold, cruel, capitalist institution. I’m most definitely guilty of a similar aversion myself, albeit to a much different (and probably the most common) UChicago archetype.

The archetype I’m envisioning is the one who works too hard but doesn’t know how to have fun; someone who is solely academically oriented and far too theoretically focused to be a part of the practical, real world; someone who is socially awkward and perhaps a little too eccentric for me to have enough in common with. So I try, both consciously and subconsciously, to distance myself from that stereotype by emphasizing myself as someone who is well-rounded, well-adjusted, and sociable. I know with full certainty that there is a plethora of well-rounded, well-adjusted, and sociable people at this school. But I can never fully shake this image out of my head because it’s been frequently reinforced by my experiences during my two years here. Take, for example, the advice I got from a networking call I had with a recent UChicago alum in February. “When you get to the interviews, make sure they know that you can have a conversation with them,” he told me. “UChicago kids have a reputation for being weird and awkward, so it won’t be hard to stand out from the rest once you do that.” It’s one of many moments when I’ve found myself disheartened by what the image of the classic UChicago student seems to be.

I want to emphasize that I don’t hate UChicago; I’m having a wonderful experience and I don’t regret coming here. But I’ve realized that I, just like every other cynical student, have somewhat alienated myself from this university because of its unflattering stereotypes. We have no school spirit. Instead, we each justify ourselves by saying that we’re not quintessential. But in clinging so firmly to our exceptionality, we’re reinforcing a norm defined by nerdiness, social ineptitude, and factionalism. Perhaps, instead, if we could embrace ourselves as part of UChicago’s culture, not as exceptions to it, we could add a bit of dimension to the perception of our school. We have to stop telling ourselves that we’re not like other UChicago students—that we’re different.

Manya Bharadwaj is a third-year in the College.


It’s been updated to “Where fun goes to be shot in a gang-related drive-by.”


Well it’s in Hyde Park on the Southside and admittedly will never be as safe as Evanston. However, the Obama Library is opening in June and it’s just a few blocks from campus- this should make the whole area busier and safer.

When we visited for admitted students days, the campus felt fine but there were campus safety and police cars parked on many streets.
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