Los Angeles currently has over 60,000 homeless people in it. Many of those are a stone's throw from UCLA in every direction. |
Very different than Berkeley campus & surroundings where students don’t feel safe. I live in LA. UCLA is a stone’s throw to Bel Air. Absolutely gorgeous area. There are some homeless to the south, along Wilshire and adjacent to the 405, a maybe a few who float through Westwood Village itself. Very different than Berkeley. |
I also live in LA. I wouldn't describe Westwood or the UCLA campus as "gorgeous" though... |
I guess you did. |
DP. We live about an hour away from Berkeley (in the South Bay); how realistic of a commute is it? |
I was referring to what lies to the north of campus…Bel Air, Sunset Blvd. A poster said LA’s homeless are a stone’s throw from UCLA in every direction. So I wanted to correct that assertion |
Yeah, that's all driving distance, not walking distance. Moot. |
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I have two kids who went to a large public HS in Los Angeles (from private schools before) and many parents were aghast that we didn't send them to Harvard Westlake. Well, they got in to all the UCs, but ended up at tippy top private colleges.
Take home message: public high school is the way to go to get in to UCs and the path to a top college is not closed off at all! (despite everyone drinking the kool aid that private high schools are the feeder to HYPSM) |
This matches my experience as well |
The problem with elite LA private schools like Harvard Westlake is there are too many ultra wealthy families who are legacies or have a good chance of donating millions; kids of really famous people or students who are themselves famous; and athletes. Then there are some really brilliant students at Harvard-Westlake. The graduating class this year has around 12% of the class (34 students) who qualified as National Merit Semi-Finalists (CA cut off is higher than most other states at 221 - so higher the same as Maryland (221), higher that Virginia (need 219) and lower than DC (223). So if you are just a really dedicated and smart student but not National Merit Scholarship smart and are just wealthy, not ultra wealthy you are going to lose out at many LA privates when colleges decide how many students to take from each high school. |
I respectfully disagree. My DD is a senior at UCLA (from DC area) and I happen to think the UCLA campus is gorgeous. I have spent a lot of time in Westwood over the past four years, and Sunset Blvd. and Bel Air are walking distance for me. I like to stay at Luskin Center on campus and take long walks every day - including through Bel Air where the views are awesome. There are some homeless folks in Westwood but not that many. We first came to Westwood during the pandemic and it was a ghost town so it's nice to see it bustling with students again. But I get it that everyone's view of "walking distance" is different. |
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https://docs.google.com/spreadsheets/d/1p6fNX5dzkTrV5QmMtrmW1kekbkgZOf4jJMNMhgg3rVw/htmlview
This was interesting to read. UC admissions summary by Adam Fischer. |
Are you Adam? That's a rubbish data set |
Which "tippy top" privates? Better than Berkeley and UCLA? |
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Following up on 15:05, legit question for the CA parents (I am an east coaster). Are some of you saying that families would prefer to send their students out of state to privates because of some issue with CA publics or something else? Or just that there are a small number of non-CA privates that are worth it?
For example, in CA you have UCLA, SD, SB, Cal, Cal Poly and many others, plus some privates. Would you say high stats kids and their families are more interested in leaving for a flagship like Wisconsin/Michigan or privates like Hopkins/Duke? Maybe it is because I am not in CA, but trying to understand this. I am in a state with very few universities worth the price, so for us OOS is important. In CA it might be different. Thank you! |