+1 - I think the Princeton review list Auburn as the happiest college campus! |
| Last April was tough as my kid was wading through waitlists and rejections from her top choice schools. I will forever be grateful to Temple University for the admitted students day they put together where she felt loved and excited about the school. It was well organized and focused on making everyone feel welcome. |
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We really enjoyed touring WashU. It was a beautiful campus and the weather was perfect the day we visited. After the tour, we walked over to zoo, which was 15 minutes away, and had a blast.
Having done the school tours last March, it was actually a fun experience and the whole application process itself wasn't bad. We looked at this as an adventure. Nine months after her first tour, she has submitted her deposit and we have moved to a stage. |
| My son and I went to an open house at La Salle. Definitely the best one we attended. He was wearing his HS hoodie (from a Christian Brothers HS). One of the brothers came up him after one of the presentations and talked to him for about 30 minutes. He asked about some brothers he knew at the HS. He asked about my son’s interests and we chatted about various topics. That personal touch put La Salle at the top of both of our lists. My son decided on another Catholic university but La Salle did all of the right things. Two thumbs up! |
That is great to hear! They're struggling with declining enrollment, but I live in Philly and know many wonderful, successful alums. Like Temple, they struggle to hook kids due to the neighborhood, but they are great schools. |
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| I love the Miami University (Ohio) campus. Walking to class on that campus would be so invigorating. |
| I loved the nerdy/quirky nature of MIT and that finally I was somewhere that people wouldn't give me s@!t for being smart. The secret tours, the weird traditions, etc. Also, I never got tired of crossing Mass Ave into Lobby 7 and thinking "I can't believe I'm actually here." |
| I know it's not everyone's thing but DS loves the architecture/"Hokie stone" of Virginia Tech. He says he thinks it makes it feel like a serious place that encourages him to take school seriously (although he has fun too). |
| We attended an admitted students day at Emory before DC committed. We were on a dorm tour that self routed to the dorm, not on the tour, with a group of parents. Standing in the first floor of the dorm with no university guide, a student came out of his dorm room, greeted us and asked what we needed and answered so many questions. When we explained what happened, he explained in a very professional, polished and unrehearsed way, what Emory had meant to him. Confirmed everything that many of us were hoping for. |
I think there is some version of this for almost everyone. My kid is at a school that I sneered at (a bit) when we were first talking about college. Of course, the admissions rate at their school today is *significantly* more competitive than the Ivy that I went to in the 1980s/90s. And yet it's still a wonderful school with nice kids. Which feels like a great win, even if it doesn't wow the neighbors. |
Virginia Tech does this, and I wouldn't be surprised if most other schools do as well. |
We love it too!
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The do this at Georgetown, too, and even at my kid's (private) high school to the admissions director. I thought it was charming! I can imagine the admissions director is less charmed, though he took it well. |
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I absolutely love Maryland's campus -- it's just gorgeous. Walking around, it feels like such a futuristic place; it's like having a tech hub within a university.
Going to the very top of the football stadium's upper deck and being able to see the Monument is breathtaking. I also love seeing happy, smiling (and in several cases, quite helpful!) students throughout the campus. There's some...heft (FLOABW) to that campus. Feels like you're somewhere important, of significance. Oh, and their slogan (or one of them?), "Fearlessly Forward", is pretty darn awesome - and apt, I'd say! |