Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I think the state honors college path with full ride gives you a big leg up in admissions for elite graduate school programs (eg, med school, law school, PhD). Ivy graduate schools love those kids.
For law school admissions, the undergraduate experience of grinding one's way to a 4.0 with no margin for error at the state honors college vs. coasting to a 3.7 at the elite private college seems like a way less fun path to the same end point.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I think the state honors college path with full ride gives you a big leg up in admissions for elite graduate school programs (eg, med school, law school, PhD). Ivy graduate schools love those kids.
For law school admissions, the undergraduate experience of grinding one's way to a 4.0 with no margin for error at the state honors college vs. coasting to a 3.7 at the elite private college seems like a way less fun path to the same end point.
What are you comparing a 4.0 to a 3.7?
Law school admissions are mostly LSAT anyway.
And what if you decide, like most people do, that law is a terrible career?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I think the state honors college path with full ride gives you a big leg up in admissions for elite graduate school programs (eg, med school, law school, PhD). Ivy graduate schools love those kids.
For law school admissions, the undergraduate experience of grinding one's way to a 4.0 with no margin for error at the state honors college vs. coasting to a 3.7 at the elite private college seems like a way less fun path to the same end point.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I think the state honors college path with full ride gives you a big leg up in admissions for elite graduate school programs (eg, med school, law school, PhD). Ivy graduate schools love those kids.
For law school admissions, the undergraduate experience of grinding one's way to a 4.0 with no margin for error at the state honors college vs. coasting to a 3.7 at the elite private college seems like a way less fun path to the same end point.
Anonymous wrote:I think the state honors college path with full ride gives you a big leg up in admissions for elite graduate school programs (eg, med school, law school, PhD). Ivy graduate schools love those kids.
Anonymous wrote:I have been told by multiple people on this board that I made this story up, but a HS friend of mine turned down UVA oos to attend University of Delaware Honors College on a full ride scholarship. She went on to get a Harvard graduate degree.
Looking back, I should have done the same, but I didn’t want to go to school so close to home
Anonymous wrote:If your kid is driven, I don't think it matters. My kid was a full B/K at UMD currently in 4th year of med school. I have another (older kid) who was a b/k kid also. Got his phd from a top tier. For undergrad, go where it makes $ sense, for post college, attend the best program possible.
Anonymous wrote:If you know a student who was admitted to an Honor College or President/Governor-type scholarship at UofState:
* what program was it (Honor college, half/full scholarship, etc)?
* What other selective/reach colleges was your student also admitted to?
* which did they choose to attend? And why?
* any intel on how it compares to the experience of friends with similar admissions offers who went to other schools?
I'm wondering how these school-in-school programs compare to famous selective colleges.
UMD has an Honors-in
-major program that on paper is an advanced Masters-in-4-years curriculum similar to an Ivy school I am familiar with. But they also had some verbiage about trying to find 15(!) students to fill he program, and merging the program with related majors to get a full cohort.