I agree completely, my kid had it on her list for a very short time since she was NMF and the money if great. |
This is true, and that is why Alabama is ranked so low. There are essentially two groups of kids there: 1) super high achievers (NMFs and scholarship kids) and 2) kids who are less interested in academics and are there for sports, Greek, etc. Some in the second group should probably not be in college and they don’t make it through. However, the two groups don’t really mix socially or even in classes. They just co-exist. If you are a high achiever, your friends typically are too. |
No 1. Laws are changing fast no one should send a DD to Alabama 2. Jobs unemployment is rising in Alabama and the whole country a degree from AL will be worthless. |
Not regional! They were in the final four two years ago, elite eight last year. Number one in the country for a while. |
Why is this? Are you afraid that she's going to meet a nice, educated Southern guy and never want to leave? |
Wrong!! Alabama is one of four growing states in the country, while Birmingham is the second fastest growing city in the country and is becoming a biotech center offshoot from UAB. Huntsville is getting Space Command so the whole program is in Alabama. The new president of Univ. of Alabama is a scientist, previously president of Ohio State, and is focusing on research. |
But the University of Alabama is 60% out of state. It’s not the same as Alabama itself. |
The largest state represented at Alabama, other than Alabama, is Illinois. |
There’s actually a lot of reasons to go outside of financials. The programs for motivated kids like Blount and Randall are incredible and there’s a lot of opportunity. Great grad and professional school placement among these kids. |
Georgia is second after Alabama, then Illinois. |
Oh no, your kid might have a marriage and family. What a tragic outcome. |
Clearly you must be a troll for Northern U, because your silly, dishonest and sarcastic twisting of the previous comment is convincing most readers here that Alabama boosters and by extension the university are best avoided. |
And this is why my kid had no interest in schools like Alabama. The stereotyping in this post, and the clearly delicate, snowflake nature of PP’s “normal” kid are so off-putting. |
Completely wrong, and the propaganda/dishonesty matters. Alabama has the fourth lowest per-capita income of all 50 states. Last year its economy grew at the 17th fastest rate of all 50 states, which at least puts it in the top half but is a slower rate than Pacific states like California or Washington or a slower absolute level than northern states like Mass and Wisconsin. Alabama's 'hub' Birmingham is small (47th largest metro area in the country) and growing at a slower growth rate than almost any metro area in the South (and also growing at a slower rate than northern cities like Hartford, Philadelphia or Minneapolis). In part as a result, Alabama's public schools rank 49th of the 50 states. Which is by and large the people you'll be studying with in Tuscaloosa (notwithstanding the weird claims here that "you can go to Alabama but avoid Alabamians almost entirely if you want") SLACs aren't for everyone, but there are a lot of other state flagships that offer the experience of a big state university without Alabama's additional challenges of being in a relatively poor state with poor education levels. It might be the right school for some, but I'd pay more attention to those documented facts than to silly anecdotes about how happy and well-dressed 'everyone' looks. |
There are lots of things I don't like about Alabama, but this is correct. |