There is literally only one direction one goes from Stanford, but the OP's daughter sounds like she would be an academic fit anywhere, so she should go somewhere she thinks she would be happier. |
Excel in music and get Cs in the other classes. |
My kid is also in school in CA and the distance is more difficult than expected. I recently visited and it helped a lot. |
About the Asian kid who turned down Stanford - the nicest and kindest kid ever who is strong in STEM but is going to pursue his/her passion at HYP, writing. I am Asian and my stem kid refused to apply to MIT as DC has been there on summer programs and hated the campus. DC is at a public college w top engineering programs and a football team.. To the Iowa State applicant - I used to live in Iowa - nicest people. Make sure u catch a football game! |
Lots of kids that go out of state end up back at their in-state flagship by sophomore yr because they can't deal without their high school friends (and/or bf/gf). I've seen it dozens of times. |
I would not say lots of kids. I have had 2 kids graduate and don’t remember any but one coming back to MD and it was to St Mary’s because her parents divorced and they couldn’t afford her OOS private school. It was pretty sad because she was not happy at St Mary’s. |
If she is looking for "the best time of her life" the problem isn't standford but expectations. Not everyone gets that, and that is fine. My kid was just talking about this with me on the phoneme .
I'm sorry she didn't make the best choice for herself. Give it time, though. We are in the part of the semester the experts warn us about. |
Duke is its own animal entirely. |
She would likely be unhappy at any other university by now. Isn't having the time of her life? So, basically she is not getting drunk and partying day and night? Tell her to stop whining, she has to finish a semester or a year and she is a grown up now, and makde her own bed. |
Wow, I often find myself hoping that some of these posters are not parents. The harsh ones with messed up values.
How would you like to be thousands of miles away from home...sad and feeling like you messed up on the first major decision you ever had to make. And some insensitive adult characterizes your predicament as "whining because you aren't getting drunk every night." |
I have a friend who went to Iowa State, then earned a Ph.D at Stanford. Also in engineering. |
She might have found more of a niche at Princeton, which now accepts a small number of transfers. |
PP again - Princeton has a small cohort of religious conservatives. There are strong evangelicals groups, a strong yet small Catholic presence, and practicing Orthodox Jews. (I'm not sure which religion the young lady in question practices). I remember meeting faithful Mormons as well. Professor Robert George is well respected on campus. Jamie Rankin is an Evangelical professor in the German department. Athletes in Action is an evangelical fellowship for athletes. I hope that this young lady finds her niche! |
Even the people I knew who were most unhappy fall of freshman year were happy by spring. Some had already applied as transfers but by the time the acceptance came through, had a hard time deciding whether to go.
I think she needs to give it time. People think of college as a wonderful time in life, but it gets more wonderful the further away from it you get. |
Give it time, OP. I went to my first choice college, which I dreamed about for two years and applied early decision to, and was utterly miserable for most of the first semester. I liked the classes but socially was really unhappy - nasty roommate and didn't click with my hallmates, who would openly exclude me. After Thanksgiving break, I finally found my real friends, and then I never looked back.
I would really advise sticking it out for the full first year, and then see where you are. It can take a semester or two to adjust, get through culture shock, and figure out whether the school is right for you and what you want to do with your studies...there are many academic paths to take and this is the time to explore them. |