Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Yeah, that's all made up.
You don't have kids at top private. People are crazy. And obnoxious. I can totally believe a parent was made to feel embarrassed their DC was going to Indiana. Not that they should feel that way, or have any reason to feel that way, but that they did, and I appreciate the honesty. I recently had a parent at my DCs school tell me that another DC was going to INdiana, but they quickly followed up with "they're in Kelley," which is the Business School. Indiana is a great school in a great college town.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Yeah, that's all made up.
You don't have kids at top private. People are crazy. And obnoxious. I can totally believe a parent was made to feel embarrassed their DC was going to Indiana. Not that they should feel that way, or have any reason to feel that way, but that they did, and I appreciate the honesty. I recently had a parent at my DCs school tell me that another DC was going to INdiana, but they quickly followed up with "they're in Kelley," which is the Business School. Indiana is a great school in a great college town.
Anonymous wrote:Yeah, that's all made up.
Anonymous wrote:Yeah, that's all made up.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Choosing the right safety school is important. Feel free to share any comments, experiences, or advice if this applies to you.
My kid's safety was Indiana. He was at a fancy private school and for a while he was embarrassed and truth be told so was I. He had been shut out of all the SLACs, and mid-tier mid-sized universities (Lehigh, Bucknell, etc.). 3 years later, he is happier than any one of his high school classmates and is the only one who has lined up a great internship which has a good chance of turning into a permanent offer upon graduation.
Anonymous wrote:NP. We visited Michigan, Wisconsin and Indiana and —this is strange to say about a huge state school- Indiana had the most liberal arts-y campus feel of them all. It’s pretty, has a nice town, and has a lot of cultural stuff for the Midwest. A kid who had been aiming for a SLAC might like the feel of Indiana better than more obvious choices.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Choosing the right safety school is important. Feel free to share any comments, experiences, or advice if this applies to you.
My kid's safety was Indiana. He was at a fancy private school and for a while he was embarrassed and truth be told so was I. He had been shut out of all the SLACs, and mid-tier mid-sized universities (Lehigh, Bucknell, etc.). 3 years later, he is happier than any one of his high school classmates and is the only one who has lined up a great internship which has a good chance of turning into a permanent offer upon graduation.
Anonymous wrote:Yeah, that's all made up.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Choosing the right safety school is important. Feel free to share any comments, experiences, or advice if this applies to you.
My kid's safety was Indiana. He was at a fancy private school and for a while he was embarrassed and truth be told so was I. He had been shut out of all the SLACs, and mid-tier mid-sized universities (Lehigh, Bucknell, etc.). 3 years later, he is happier than any one of his high school classmates and is the only one who has lined up a great internship which has a good chance of turning into a permanent offer upon graduation.
Anonymous wrote:Choosing the right safety school is important. Feel free to share any comments, experiences, or advice if this applies to you.