Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:That's wild that you'd get into Honors next door to FC.
Shows what a lottery admissions is, and how Honors College doesn't mean anything.
No need to cut down the student’s acceptance into UDel Honors—sheesh!
I think it also shows that UMD is a really gigantic school with a somewhat impersonal experience and registering/enrolling for classes can be a challenge there (FC is one way they try to manage the incoming class). Having smaller honors classes, special housing, enrichment programs, research opportunities, and priority registration as some of the honors perks at UDel seems like a nice benefit!
What major, OP? That may help with deciding.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:https://www.dcurbanmom.com/jforum/posts/list/1255116.page for FC discussion
It is just one semester and there will be plenty of kids eating at a variety of times, whether or not they are FC. Make the decision based on overall 4-yr program and financials, not on how special the school made you feel by how they admitted you.
+1 I get the "oh they didn't *really* want me", but FC doesn't seem to be a big deal. No one knows who's in it. Just say you're not a morning person so you would rather take the late classes. Also, your kid won't be the only one in FC, so you will find people to socialize with.
My DC's friend was in FC. It didn't hurt their social life. Their social life is more active than my DC's, but then they aren't as academically focused. But, that's a personal issue rather than due to FC issue.
Anonymous wrote:That's wild that you'd get into Honors next door to FC.
Shows what a lottery admissions is, and how Honors College doesn't mean anything.
Anonymous wrote:That's wild that you'd get into Honors next door to FC.
Shows what a lottery admissions is, and how Honors College doesn't mean anything.
Anonymous wrote:https://www.dcurbanmom.com/jforum/posts/list/1255116.page for FC discussion
It is just one semester and there will be plenty of kids eating at a variety of times, whether or not they are FC. Make the decision based on overall 4-yr program and financials, not on how special the school made you feel by how they admitted you.