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College and University Discussion
Reply to "Dropping out at CMU."
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[quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous]It’s a nerdy, soulless place and really only good for a small fraction of people. Walk down Forbes Ave, immediately adjacent to Pitt & CMU dorms — you’ll 100% be able to spot which school the kid attends. [/quote] This 100%[/quote] NP.. My kid is thinking of applying to CMU for CS. I keep hearing that students at CMU seem miserable, barely any social life. I think my DC might want to re-think CMU. DC is in a magnet program and can handle a tough work load, BUT, they want college to be fun, too, and I don't blame DC. DC just spent the last four years working their tail off, but at least had a fun group of kids to hang out with and had a social life. I asked DC if DC wants to spend another four years of having to work their tail off but with very little social life. Something to think about.[/quote] That is why rankings really don't matter. The school you pick should be a good fit for you. Many kids are burnt out or nearly burnt out after 4 years of pressure in HS to excel to get into elite schools. Even if you don't, many kids spend college having to fight to get into their major (engineering that isn't direct admit or if they want to change their major), pre-med anything, etc. Other kids want to attend a school that is collaborative and allows them to learn, be social and not be 100% focused on academics all the time. I personally just want my kid to be happy---they are smart and will succeed wherever they attend. So they picked a place that will allow that---they can self select any major (including engineering), they can pick their core curriculum (open ended) and work is collaborative, not overly competitive. After 4 years of striving to get into college, my kid just wants to be able to learn in a more relaxed environment. [/quote]
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