Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I would have been lost at a public school and likely never would have made my PhD program. At my small liberal arts I was able to do research directly with my professor, setting me up for superior internships, which led me to my graduate education and my first job. I would not be where I am if I didn't have that opportunity...
Not all public schools are large. And not all private schools are small. The experience you had with your professor has nothing to do with private versus public.
And if you think it did, then that doesn't say much for the education you received.
Not to mention research at a liberal arts school? Does that even exist? I didn't think liberal arts schools received a lot of r&d money?
Anonymous wrote:I would have been lost at a public school and likely never would have made my PhD program. At my small liberal arts I was able to do research directly with my professor, setting me up for superior internships, which led me to my graduate education and my first job. I would not be where I am if I didn't have that opportunity...
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I would have been lost at a public school and likely never would have made my PhD program. At my small liberal arts I was able to do research directly with my professor, setting me up for superior internships, which led me to my graduate education and my first job. I would not be where I am if I didn't have that opportunity...
Not all public schools are large. And not all private schools are small. The experience you had with your professor has nothing to do with private versus public.
And if you think it did, then that doesn't say much for the education you received.
Not to mention research at a liberal arts school? Does that even exist? I didn't think liberal arts schools received a lot of r&d money?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I would have been lost at a public school and likely never would have made my PhD program. At my small liberal arts I was able to do research directly with my professor, setting me up for superior internships, which led me to my graduate education and my first job. I would not be where I am if I didn't have that opportunity...
Not all public schools are large. And not all private schools are small. The experience you had with your professor has nothing to do with private versus public.
And if you think it did, then that doesn't say much for the education you received.
Anonymous wrote:I would have been lost at a public school and likely never would have made my PhD program. At my small liberal arts I was able to do research directly with my professor, setting me up for superior internships, which led me to my graduate education and my first job. I would not be where I am if I didn't have that opportunity...
Anonymous wrote:OP here. Thanks. To PP, I don't think we can afford private--huge difference between saving 100K twice sand saving 280K twice!
Anonymous wrote:Why public? It sounds like you can afford the more prestigious, smaller ivy or seven sisters, which are much better than publics. Those run ~$70K a year currently....