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Reply to "TikTok is driving the increase in popularity for southern schools"
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[quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous]Or, it could be because the schools are cheaper and sometimes easier to get into. [/quote] Huh. On my DC block alone, we have current students at: Vandy, Tulane, Rice, Charleston and Clemson. Which of these are the cheap ones, again? [/quote] Sounds like a lot philistines and kids frozen out of t15s [/quote] Vanderbilt and Rice are both T15 schools. They are both more highly ranked than Columbia, Cornell, Berkeley, Notre Dame, UCLA, Georgetown, Michigan and so on and so forth. It's not just rubes, philistines, and sorority girls who are choosing to go to school in the south. And I don't think the kids going to Duke, Vandy, or Rice are particularly influenced by TikTok. It is possible to get a very good education in the South.[/quote] Vandy and rice are not t15s for all intents and purposes They are massively underrepresented in boswash corridor and Sf/la They are functionally fungible with t20-30 privates in the northeast [/quote] The “bowash corridor and Sf/La” are the past. The Southeast and Texas are the future. The majority of fast-growing regions are located in the South, an area home to nearly 130 million people. Georgia, Arizona, Idaho, Alabama, and Oklahoma made up the latter half of the top 10 states with the biggest domestic net migration totals. In comparison, California, New York and Illinois saw the largest net domestic outmigration last year, respectively, despite California remaining the most populous state. New Jersey, Massachusetts, Louisiana and Maryland also had less people move into their state than move out. With regard to metro areas, Ocala, Fl.a; Tallahassee, Fla.; Charlotte, N.C.; Savannah, Ga.; Houston; Deltona, Fla.; and Myrtle Beach, S.C., all saw inbound moves exceed outbound moves by more than 6 percentage points. In addition to being located in the Sun Belt, all these areas experienced a significant job market recovery after the COVID-19 pandemic, according to the report. On average, the areas with the highest inbound move rates have 5 percent more jobs now compared with March 2020. https://thehill.com/changing-america/sustainability/infrastructure/3839747-these-are-the-states-americans-are-moving-to/ [/quote]
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