Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Your kid is going to be one of 35,000. Of course it’s going to be competitive, survival of the fittest for clubs, office hours, classes, etc. . .
True, but even big schools can have collaborative environments. From what I hear from people who actually attend, the experience is very positive. So it seems that any kind of competitiveness is outweighed by many positives.
Anonymous wrote:It’s competitive down there, but I think a lot of those who chose to go there were competitive in high school and it draws the tops of many of the Florida high schools so lots of overachievers. Clubs and popular organizations, volunteer ops, are competitive to get into or particularly leadership in them, but there are tons of them available. My daughter loves it down there, but she definitely has to work for opportunities as they don’t just fall in her lap without putting herself out there. The students are all supportive with each other and tons of school spirit.
Anonymous wrote:It’s competitive down there, but I think a lot of those who chose to go there were competitive in high school and it draws the tops of many of the Florida high schools so lots of overachievers. Clubs and popular organizations, volunteer ops, are competitive to get into or particularly leadership in them, but there are tons of them available. My daughter loves it down there, but she definitely has to work for opportunities as they don’t just fall in her lap without putting herself out there. The students are all supportive with each other and tons of school spirit.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Your kid is going to be one of 35,000. Of course it’s going to be competitive, survival of the fittest for clubs, office hours, classes, etc. . .
True, but even big schools can have collaborative environments. From what I hear from people who actually attend, the experience is very positive. So it seems that any kind of competitiveness is outweighed by many positives.
What even is the purpose of this thread is you’ve already decided that the positives outweigh the competitiveness?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Your kid is going to be one of 35,000. Of course it’s going to be competitive, survival of the fittest for clubs, office hours, classes, etc. . .
True, but even big schools can have collaborative environments. From what I hear from people who actually attend, the experience is very positive. So it seems that any kind of competitiveness is outweighed by many positives.
Anonymous wrote:Your kid is going to be one of 35,000. Of course it’s going to be competitive, survival of the fittest for clubs, office hours, classes, etc. . .
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I know that this forum is not a Florida forum, but it seems that a lot of kids in the DMV are heading to UF this fall. For those who had/have kids attend UF, how competitive was the environment? I read on here that the pre-med kids are extremely competitive with each other, but what about the other majors?
I have one kid in med-school and another one on the way, both big State U's. The competitive pre-med thing might be prominent at smaller colleges like SLACs where there are smaller pre-med cohorts competing for fewer Profs and class offerings but not so much at large State U's where you might have 500-600 that start a pre-med track (orgo usually culls the heard). Students are competing against themselves with different majors, classes and such. A lot don't even know each other. It's not like they are hacking into the system and changing grades or something. Your kid just needs to go and get the best GPA they can.
I wasn't premed, but my major had me bumping into the premeds sometimes and they would do nuts stuff like ruin the lab solvents in orgo. I really hope those people didn't end up actual doctors.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I know that this forum is not a Florida forum, but it seems that a lot of kids in the DMV are heading to UF this fall. For those who had/have kids attend UF, how competitive was the environment? I read on here that the pre-med kids are extremely competitive with each other, but what about the other majors?
I have one kid in med-school and another one on the way, both big State U's. The competitive pre-med thing might be prominent at smaller colleges like SLACs where there are smaller pre-med cohorts competing for fewer Profs and class offerings but not so much at large State U's where you might have 500-600 that start a pre-med track (orgo usually culls the heard). Students are competing against themselves with different majors, classes and such. A lot don't even know each other. It's not like they are hacking into the system and changing grades or something. Your kid just needs to go and get the best GPA they can.
Anonymous wrote:I know that this forum is not a Florida forum, but it seems that a lot of kids in the DMV are heading to UF this fall. For those who had/have kids attend UF, how competitive was the environment? I read on here that the pre-med kids are extremely competitive with each other, but what about the other majors?