Anonymous wrote:Went to Michigan State. Loved it. Loved the size (though if it had been a few thousand less I wouldn't have noticed!) Friendships were largely made in the dorms freshmen year. Each floor was very social. I would go again in a heartbeat. My husband also went to a large state flagship. We had that in common. We have encouraged our children to do the same.
Anonymous wrote:I went to University of Michigan and bleed maize and blue. I adored it. I am from NYC so I am no stranger to large groups of people. Going to college was my first time away from home. At first it seemed large and scary but it wasn't long before I made friends and could get around easily.
I know you said this is not a discussion about the greek system but at a large school you have to find smaller group with whom you can socialize. Think fraternity/sorority, sports, you need something.
Once of the best things about Michigan was any day of the week you wanted to party you could find someone to party with but likewise any day of the week you wanted to study you could find someone to study with.
I would do it again in a heartbeat. I met my best friends at Michigan. It was a great 4 years and I can't imagine my life had I gone to a smaller school or frankly a different school. Go Blue!
Anonymous wrote:If you go the huge Uni way, be sure to accept your admission ASAP and submit for freshman housing ASAP. DS got into PSU, but it was late and all that was left was "supplementary housing". Yuck, no thanks.
Anonymous wrote:I went to Penn State. Loved it, in much part because of the size. However, I was very independent and responsible. It would have been easy to blow off classes and fail out, like my brother did at another big state school. While I did ultimately join a sorority, that was a very small part of my experience (I ultimately quit it at the start of my senior year). I had friends in my dorm, in my major, in the extra-curricular and clubs I was in. Lots of opportunity to make it what you want it to be.
Anonymous wrote:I'm looking for thoughts of those who have actually attended a large university with a student population greater than 20,000 (think UMD, UMichigan, UCLA, Wisconsin-Madison, etc). Though you find your niche, a lot of students gravitate to those in their majors.
This is not a discussion about joining fraternities or sororities so let's not discuss the advantages or disadvantages nor having a TA versus a professor. I've got these two areas covered thanks to other threads.
For those who have attended large universities, did you feel 'lost' at times because of so many people? If given a 2nd chance, would you attend a large university again knowing what you know now?