I actually have the opposite take. It's not a test optional school. I see it as for a naturally smart but maybe not well connected student. Compare to Priceton's admissions and come back to me. |
I'm from a Cornell and Michigan family. They do have positive similarities. They are schools that value intellectual interests more than elitism. I was at Cornell a few years back during the early weeks of school and the freshmen were out meeting each other and getting free ice cream and doing silly photo booth type stuff. During a beautiful golden hour evening. It looked so fun for them. My grandmother went to Cornell and my mother. A lot of Ivies didn't allow women to be part of their main colleges until quite late. Random Internet says: "Eventually, Princeton and Yale began admitting women in 1969, with Brown University following in 1971 and Dartmouth in 1972. The lone Ivy holdout, Columbia University, did not admit women until 1983. By contrast, Cornell University and the University of Pennsylvania had admitted women since 1870 and 1914, respectively." If you're going to go to an Ivy, go to one that had its values in the right place early on. Maybe read: https://alumni.cornell.edu/cornellians/latest/ |
On campus recruiting is major agnostic at Cornell so students from all the colleges can attend. This is one of the benefits of attending Cornell, at a lot of other colleges some OCR events are only available to business majors. |
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Does Cornell have a full service hospital on campus? I have a high schooler who has excellent grades in advanced classes, solid ECs, but has a medical condition which might require specialty care during her years in college. We only want her to apply to places where there is accessible and really good medical care.
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My daughter is a sophomore there. She had a summer internship lined up this past November through on campus recruiting events. Excellent support with resume writing. As for other aspects: Yes, it’s an intense place. Kids study hard and play hard. She really likes it and has a nice group of friends. The weather isn’t as bad as she thought it would be. I did buy her a “sun” light which she loves. She really loves her professors and has found them to be very kind and supportive. The 6-hour drive to and from DC is a pain. |
LOL Mamaroneck? |
| My daughter graduated from Cornell engineering and I did my MBA there. It is amazing to me the way people bash Cornell on this forum. The weather is not that bad; not much different from most of New England, where I'm from. More annoying is the way some people talk about Cornell as second-rate. Cornell has top-notch programs, great recruiting, a beautiful campus, and diversity in people and programs. Your kid has to decide what they want to do, and in what part of the country. Cornell, UVA and GT are all great options. |
I’m a parent of a current student who posted earlier about buying a “sun” lamp for my daughter. I do have to push back on your assertion that the weather is “not much different from New England.” Actually it is…in terms of cloudiness. Ithaca is one of the cloudiest cities. Boston averages 159 cloudy days. Ithaca comes in at 206 days of cloudiness. That’s a real difference. Cornell is still an amazing school. |
| Cornell alum here. I have mixed feelings about my experience (30+ yrs ago) but one thing that has never happened to me is anyone saying I went to a “lesser Ivy” or similar BS. Literally no one actually says this in the real world. |
Cayuga Medical Center is a full service hospital 15-20 mins off campus. https://cayugahealth.org/. |
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Too many trolls on this forum who have no idea what they are talking about. Cornell is not ranked last or next to last in the Ivy League by any major publication. Cornell is a powerhouse academic institution.
US News: Princeton 1, Harvard 3, Penn 7, Cornell 12, Brown 13, Dartmouth 13, Columbia 15 Wall Street Journal: Yale 3, Princeton 4, Harvard 5, Columbia 8, Penn 9, Cornell 18, Brown 27, Dartmouth 47 Forbes: Columbia 2, Princeton 3, Harvard 6, Yale 9, Penn 10, Cornell 14, Dartmouth 17, Brown 18 QS World University Rankings: Harvard 5, Penn 15, Cornell 16, Yale 21, Princeton 25, Columbia 38, Brown 69 Times World's Top Universities: Yale 2, Harvard 6, Penn 10, Cornell 16, Brown 50, Dartmouth 61 |
I think it's from the perspective of so called "old money" or "multi-generation wealth", who prefers Dartmouth or Brown over Cornell. Cornell is definitely more MC/UMC. To each their own. |
Wow, you nailed it. |
Same (incl mixed feelings about my exerience there..but that was ancient history at that point). But milarly I've worked alongside smart talented people with degrees from all sorts of colleges. Literally college name matters much less for most jobs than people here think. Re the sun, I moved to Boston after graduation and the increase in sunlight was extremely noticeable. |
To answer your question directly, no, the campus itself does not have a hospital, or even an infirmary that can see kids or have them stay overnight. Cornell's (excellent) medical school and affiliated hospital are located in NYC, not Ithaca. I can't speak to how the on campus Cornell health service would manage chronic health issues, but to the degree specialty care matters to you, you should probably reach out to Cornell health to see if the could handle it, and if not, to determine accessibility (and insurance coverage) of the local hospitals. |