Nothing gimmicky about it; it's just a good service. Northeastern is an R1 research university first. Co-op was a nice bonus, but it wasn't the major factor for my kid. One of my kids picked Northeastern over a couple of higher-ranked schools. No school is for everyone. If your kid picked a school and is happy, then that's great. My kid and I don't bash the schools that rejected them or the schools my kid didn't choose. |
If you had elementary school math, you would know. |
| Like or don't like, but Northeastern is getting more than 100,000 applicants per year. I went to college in Boston back in the day when Northeastern was a commuter school for kids in Revere that wanted to become cops. Northeastern has come a long way since then. Good for them. They seem to understand what students want these days. A lot of universities are envious. |
🤔 4 year University, mine (and most of his peers) had 2 month internships all 4 years at 4 different companies. Class of 2025 grads achieved a 96% landed rate immediately to within 6 months. Business school 98% / Liberal Arts 94% |
Which school? |
That’s not the same as 6 months at the same company (or 6 months at two different companies) as you surely know. |
Some people like to use the term 'commuter school' in a derogatory manner to bash the school. However, it has a very proud history and tradition of serving working-class and average Americans, while so-called elite schools catered to the rich Whites and operated like country clubs. The co-op program is rooted in that history and tradition. MIT was another school that began by serving working-class and average Americans. It was regarded largely as a vocational school well into the 1950s. It is highly ranked in internship and co-op programs as well. https://www.usnews.com/best-colleges/rankings/internship-programs?_sort=rank&_sortDirection=asc |
BTW, speaking of 'cops', because of that tradition, Northeastern is highly ranked for its Criminal Justice major. It has its own School of Criminology & Criminal Justice. |
Which is why if you look at your kid’s Naviance or SCOIR, you’ll likely see a significantly higher admission rate than what Northeastern reports. Because of course if the kid is accepted, regardless of if it was Boston or Oakland or whatever, they report that they were accepted. I think our (public) high school’s acceptance rate to Northeastern is like 28%. |
I do know NEU requires 6 month co-ops or 2 alternatives, correct me if I’m wrong, but they can opt for community service or global outreach programs. 5 of my son’s HS peers went to NEU. Their stress level to secure these co-ops was intense despite advisors “helping” them. By that I mean, here’s a list, good luck. I ran into parents of these kids and we’d share our kids experiences. It’s all co-op, all the time. It consumes the students. It’s competitive and demoralizing when others easily secure them. It disrupts living arrangements, friendships, and continuity. My son confirmed that 2 friends hated the stress until they landed something, literally anything. One of them regretted not graduating in 4 years vs 4 1/2 or 5 years. Just something students/parents should be aware of. I think students prefer new experiences at different companies. Remember most don’t declare major, minor, concentrations until sophomore year. Not at all an NEU basher. OP is correct though. NEU normalized manipulating the numbers and ranking. |
Yes, they are absolutely not of the quality to be in the top 50. They should be much lower. |
Exactly, on Scoir our private school's acceptance rate to NEU is 39%, not the 5% they report to USNWR. |
They get 100K acceptances because it's FREE to apply to for most people (DS got a free waiver after touring) and there are no supplemental essays to write. You just need to fill in biographical data. Some kids have never heard of it, look at USNWR see it's top 50 and free with no essays, and bingo ... it's a no-brainer to apply to! |
Well on SCOIR our acceptance rate to Penn is 20%, not the 5% they report to USNWR. Our Columbia ED acceptance rate is 50%, not 13%. That means absolutely nothing and is of no significance. |
Exactly, on Scoir our private school's acceptance rate to NEU is 39%, not the 5% they report to USNWR! (Note: I applied earlier to the wrong comment. This is what I meant to apply to.) |