UNC grad from Indy and I would endorse IU as being similar to UNC. It just gives really similar vibes in terms of the campus and student body. |
UNC grad from Indy and I would endorse IU as being similar to UNC. It just gives really similar vibes in terms of the campus and student body. |
Plus similar school spirit and hoops tradition. IU is similar, too, even if men's basketball is going through a rough patch. |
LMAO Durham is not Boston |
UNC students rarely go to Durham. Maybe for a Bulls game or a restaurant every once in a blue moon. |
I agree |
Come on, these suggestions are all flawed in some way. I think it’s best to shoot for an overall similar vibe. Indiana for sure. Kansas, yes. Michigan is sooo different, & not just the size & weather. Michigan is like “I’m going to smoke some Peruvian birch bark, protest the tuition hike, throw the football around, & then study for my Mongolian economics class.” |
OP/ my son is in love with Chapel Hill too- head over heels for the college town vibe. “Even the fire trucks are Carolina Blue,” he says.
We are in NoVA and our private college advisor says she gets kids into ivys and they get rejected from UNC OOS. Much of their OOS are recruited athletes. I’m following this thread as my son wants many of the same things (college town, warmer weather though not a deal breaker). Wisconsin and Michigan are out for us for other reasons so hoping UF, UVA, UGA and Indiana fit the bill. |
lol. Somebody knows Ann Arbor. |
FYI - OOS recruited scholarship athletes do NOT count toward the 18% OOS cap for Chapel Hill. |
VT is nothing like UNC. |
Michigan is similar but not easier to get into. |
Correct. VT is better. |
UNC family. Recent grads. Be realistic but do not give up hope. Tell college counselor and prepare to let UNC know they are your first choice and you will attend if accepted,
They also like community service! |
LOL. |