Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I have lots of family members that went there. The campus is very nice. My son applied there last year and got in but wasn't interested. He wanted a city school. Our high school sends a lot of kids there every year and has for a long time.
The business school has a very good recommendation. Most kids probably head to Cincinatti or Chicago after graduation. Or they head home.
Very good with merit aid if you come from a school that has a ton of kids over a 4.0. So, you will get it even if you aren't in the top ten percent.
That's great to know about the merit. Is the college town nice and are there a lot of things to do? For example, my kid wasn't excited about JMU because it felt kind of remote to her.
Our DC applied and with her 4.3 test optional she was given 25K off a year, with a COA of $32K.
Harrisburg has nothing on Miami in terms of feelnig remote.. and they kept mentioning "being in the middle of cornfields" during the tour. Not a great sell for our DC.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I have lots of family members that went there. The campus is very nice. My son applied there last year and got in but wasn't interested. He wanted a city school. Our high school sends a lot of kids there every year and has for a long time.
The business school has a very good recommendation. Most kids probably head to Cincinatti or Chicago after graduation. Or they head home.
Very good with merit aid if you come from a school that has a ton of kids over a 4.0. So, you will get it even if you aren't in the top ten percent.
That's great to know about the merit. Is the college town nice and are there a lot of things to do? For example, my kid wasn't excited about JMU because it felt kind of remote to her.
Anonymous wrote:Can anyone share any insights on Miami of Ohio? Academics (specifically for undergrad business majors), campus life, dorms, social life, sports? My kid wants a big rah rah school and we already have a bunch of those on her list, but we just don't know much about this school. We probably won't be able to visit it either, until after she gets an acceptance, should she get one. What makes it a "new ivy?"
Anonymous wrote:It's mostly preppies from the suburbs of Cleveland, Columbus, Cincinnati and especially Chicago. The academics are a bit stronger than the sky-high acceptance rate suggests, and business is one of the better programs. Greek life dominates the social scene. Dorms are average, but most only live in them freshman year. Sophomores and some juniors live in their fraternity/sorority houses, and most juniors and seniors live in off-campus housing. Not a huge rah-rah school when it comes to sports and DEFINITELY not a "new ivy" or "public ivy." Some dildo wrote a book in the 1980s calling it that and the school has been clinging to it ever since.
Anonymous wrote:I have lots of family members that went there. The campus is very nice. My son applied there last year and got in but wasn't interested. He wanted a city school. Our high school sends a lot of kids there every year and has for a long time.
The business school has a very good recommendation. Most kids probably head to Cincinatti or Chicago after graduation. Or they head home.
Very good with merit aid if you come from a school that has a ton of kids over a 4.0. So, you will get it even if you aren't in the top ten percent.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Lots of hot girls.
Not that MIAMI. There are very few hot girls at Miami Ohio….I went there…
Great school. I loved it. But one thing when you get out of OH that you have to deal with your whole life is explaining that it is not UM or the U. It is Miami OHIO. I used to be upset about it…10 years of explaining……I just dont care anymore..
Anonymous wrote:Lots of hot girls.
Anonymous wrote:It's mostly preppies from the suburbs of Cleveland, Columbus, Cincinnati and especially Chicago. The academics are a bit stronger than the sky-high acceptance rate suggests, and business is one of the better programs. Greek life dominates the social scene. Dorms are average, but most only live in them freshman year. Sophomores and some juniors live in their fraternity/sorority houses, and most juniors and seniors live in off-campus housing. Not a huge rah-rah school when it comes to sports and DEFINITELY not a "new ivy" or "public ivy." Some dildo wrote a book in the 1980s calling it that and the school has been clinging to it ever since.