No, suggesting Iowa's some bastion of intellectualism may be disingenuous. Suggesting it's some bastion of intellectualism compared to Arizona is a pretty apt commentary on Arizona. |
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Iowa has the Writer's Workshop -- widely recognized as the premier creative writing program in the country -- which is primarily a graduate program but also offers about 20 courses at the undergraduate level. There's also a non-fiction writing program at Iowa. If an undergrad has any interest in writing, Iowa is nationally known -- and a magnet for writers and intellectual life -- in a way that has no direct counterpart at Arizona.
Sorry to digress from the riveting discussion of weather. |
is it though? so what is your evidence for this then? |
| What is the potential major? |
Time spent at both, friendship with tenured faculty at both schools. Look, each of these schools has strengths - they're better schools than many of the deep south flagships that DCUM is recently agog about -- and they're each situated in communities that have real appeal in their own way. But Iowa shouldn't be dismissed just because most bloviators on DCUM don't really know anything about the Universities of Arizona or Iowa except that one is located where they'd travel to get away from cold weather and the other ... is located in a place they wouldn't travel to. Or because some ex-Chicagoan who doesn't understand the difference between absolute and comparative judgments recalls it as a school that Chicagoland kids who couldn't get into UIUC attended (guess what, OP's kid probably isn't in the running for UVA or UMD either). This chain has really let the OP down. |
Astrophysics at Arizona is similarly outstanding. (Yes, really.) |
+1 |
And astronomy and anthropology. Probably environmental science too, especially regarding water issues. |
Of course it is, not many fields more location driven. Yet, intro astronomy is no different than anywhere else, a way to get a science credit with two multiple choice tests and a moon journal. |
The point isn't to avoid retirees--but a net migration of downsizing retirees ups the costs and diminishes the supply for housing for singles/couples. |
I took that class and no, that’s not what it was. But obviously a 101 class doesn’t represent the entire major or department. Why are you so angry about U of A not being awful across the board? |
| Iowa isn't emptying out - that misinformation shouldn't be a consideration. Iowa's population isn't growing as fast as Arizona -- few states are -- but Iowa's tied with Indiana as one of the fastest growing states in the Midwest over the past decade (IA's growing faster than NY, PA, IL OH, and all New England states save MA, fwiw). Of the two universities' hometowns, Iowa City is actually growing at a faster rate than Tucson. And Iowa's state capital Des Moines is, unbelievably, adding population at a faster rate than boomtown Phoenix. This isn't the so-called Rustbelt -- many Plains cities (as opposed to small rural towns) are thriving. |
OP needs to let folks know what the major is. That is the only way for people to weigh in on academics since the reality is that neither of these schools are selective state schools. That is why folks are discussing the weather. Frankly, it makes no sense why OP is even choosing between these schools, after visiting most people would have a strong preference for one over the other. The is also a DC centric board. A lot of us would rather gouge our eyes out than live in either Iowa or AZ. |
It’s not awful across the board, a self starter can get a very good education there, and plenty of individual attention, but the quality of gen ed classes is very low because of the population. |
But the argument here is that most people don't stay where they went to college, so who cares? If OPs child has no interest in staying in AZ or IA then it matters not at all. These schools are similar in almost every regard so it comes down to a personal decision there is no right answer. OP asked for opinions and is getting them. |