Now you’re just making stuff up… |
+1 On DCUM, when people give anecdotes to support a narrative, I just assume they lie. |
| I think someone may have pointe this out, but cost does not always pair w/ having citizenship. In many cases, it is connected to local residency. My UK citizen kids would have to pay international rates if they attended UK schools |
Ok. Go ahead and compare OU to IE….. |
Are you talking about University of Oklahoma? Not top 100. I’m guessing there’s exactly zero overlap between high school students considering Oklahoma vs University of Madrid. Cost of attendance for in state is on Oklahoma side. Same if you’re looking into petroleum engineering where Oklahoma is #4. You’re just making up stuff without even doing a basic research on the comparison. |
| How about comparing Fordham with IE? That seems more realistic |
Let’s see, Fordham is in NYC with proximity and connections to major corporations, financial industry etc. It’s more expensive, but kids don’t choose Fordham to save money, that’s what state universities are for. Name recognition in US is hands down Fordham, it’s not even close. |
Why do people compare European universities with American private ones? These are state schools, with similar costs, class size, teacher to student ratio etc. I suppose you could have said you saved $150k by going to the state flagship, and everyone would understand cost was the primary concern. I’m doubtful most European universities are a better deal than state flagships. |
+1 You couldn’t hack it to the state flagship, so you’re not too smart. You don’t have the money but still want the prestige. But mostly prestige that’s on sale so you get a good deal. Hence European universities. |
And you a fcuking non-Asian ass, poster of the above.
-DP |
This mostly isn’t the group applying to European universities. Usually there is some specific reason for doing so - dual citizenship, time spent abroad, parents did it previously and plant the seed, etc. Many would prefer a T25 but if they can’t get that, it’s much cheaper than shelling out $90k a year for a Tulane or Miami and more unique and different—with more choices—than going to flagship U. Also, the other poster was incorrect that these schools are similar to US state universities. At the most popular ones, they are much more similar in size to private universities, or something in between private and flagship. For example, Bocconi and St Andrews both have a bit over 8k undergrads, Trinity College Dublin has 14k, IE which had been mentioned is only like 2500. There are some bigger ones like UCL or Edinburgh but the numbers drop pretty quickly. The best comparison is to probably compare it to some mix of OOS public and private, and European schools probably win that one on cost. |
US privates and many European colleges are similar in overall size, class size, and faculty/student ratio. US publics usually much larger overall, larger class sizes, and worse faculty/student ratio. |
In addition, the group of candidates who would consider European (and UK) universities is more likely to overlap with the group of candidates who are considering private universities. Kids planning on attending their state flagship (or a nearby / lower cost flagship) -- in general -- tend to have fewer resources and may have a more local mindset. |
Our state flagship was OU. Sorry….my kid is not going to OU |
Are you having reading comprehension issues….one kid graduated from OU the other from IE…..these are the only kids I have. You might not like it so that is the comparison I have. Oh my….. |