Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
I'm nudging her towards JHU because I think she'll be happier there (she's a cool geek at heart but she strives to want to be one of the 'cool/attractive workhard/playhard' types you see at Georgetown, duke, and penn.
I just want to comment on this -- let her choose based on what she likes. At all competitive schools, there are lots of geeky kids reinventing themselves as "cool kids" at the beginning of freshman year.
Anonymous wrote:I went to Hopkins for IR. It is an excellent program, and the university, overall, a more academic place than Georgetown, which is reflected in most college rankings. SAIS faculty come to Homewood to teach undergrads, and there are few truly large classes.
Admission to the five year joint program is not guaranteed and admission is competitive.
Anonymous wrote:I went to grad school at Hopkins and thought it seemed like a pretty miserable undergrad experience. I know it has changed some in recent years, but I wouldn't want my own child to go there.
Anonymous wrote:
I'm nudging her towards JHU because I think she'll be happier there (she's a cool geek at heart but she strives to want to be one of the 'cool/attractive workhard/playhard' types you see at Georgetown, duke, and penn.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I went to Hopkins for IR. It is an excellent program, and the university, overall, a more academic place than Georgetown, which is reflected in most college rankings. SAIS faculty come to Homewood to teach undergrads, and there are few truly large classes.
Admission to the five year joint program is not guaranteed and admission is competitive.
the DMP program is guaranteed admission:
https://apply.jhu.edu/apply/direct-matriculation-programs/
naturally you have to maintain your grades once you attend to continue on.
Not sure if that was an option when I 2as there but I would be hesitant to commit to the masters as a high school senior, one could also back out of the masters progeam, I suppose.
Was your daughter already accepted to both, or just thinking about applying?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I went to Hopkins for IR. It is an excellent program, and the university, overall, a more academic place than Georgetown, which is reflected in most college rankings. SAIS faculty come to Homewood to teach undergrads, and there are few truly large classes.
Admission to the five year joint program is not guaranteed and admission is competitive.
the DMP program is guaranteed admission:
https://apply.jhu.edu/apply/direct-matriculation-programs/
naturally you have to maintain your grades once you attend to continue on.
Anonymous wrote:I went to Hopkins for IR. It is an excellent program, and the university, overall, a more academic place than Georgetown, which is reflected in most college rankings. SAIS faculty come to Homewood to teach undergrads, and there are few truly large classes.
Admission to the five year joint program is not guaranteed and admission is competitive.
Anonymous wrote:Georgetown. I went to neither (but went to a peer graduate program) and feel very strongly that Georgetown has a stronger undergraduate program.
I also think the direct matriculation program is a turn-off to employers. At my graduate program, maybe one student a year was admitted directly from undergraduate, and they had typically done something before starting undergraduate, like military service.
The best graduate programs are going to have folks who are practitioners, or have at least some on-the-ground knowledge of what it is actually like to live and work abroad. The SAIS joint matriculation program cheats those kids by not giving them the chance to bring their own experiences to the table in the classroom, making the MA program just an extension of undergraduate.