Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Is this an American thing to choose a college based on kids impressions from a campus visit? I am a immigrant and this feels so strange and random to me.
If my kid is going to spend 4 years and I'm going to spend $100,000+ on something, my kid's feelings at a school are something to consider.
Anonymous wrote:Is this an American thing to choose a college based on kids impressions from a campus visit? I am a immigrant and this feels so strange and random to me.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We toured Clemson when my dd was in elementary school. She couldn’t get over the way it is pronounced (Clempson). The whole tour, she kept muttering, there isn’t a p.
Her best friend just shared she wants to go to Clemson, and she is still struggling with the p.
Hilarious! I have no connection with this school at all, am a native of NoVA, and I do not say it with a “p” sound. Do most people actually pronounce it that way? (?). I (maybe like your daughter) am just pronouncing it as it is spelled? (?).
Without the p sound the s sounds sort of like a /z/. Every person on campus who said the name pronounced it with the p sound- it was worse if they had a strong southern accent. I have to admit I had never noticed, but I can’t stop hearing it ever since. The football announcers say the p too.
She also remembers lots of orange tiger paws on the road, but she liked those.
Half of my husband’s extended family went there and none of them say it with a P sound.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We toured a lot of colleges with our kid. Almost all were immediately and often illogically hated and these are the reasons why. This was in spring and fall of 2019.
JMU: the highway and bus system
VT: hokie this and hokie that all day long
CNU: The walmart down the road had the kitchen knife sets locked behind glass
UVA: hated the campus
URochester: yellow jacket mascot
Lafayette: tour guide referenced Harry Potter and a quidditch team
Marist: tour guide mentioned free tutoring too much
Cornell: everyone was walking and eating alone with airpods in
Ithaca: lots of blue and burgundy hair and black clothes, decided to skip the tour completely
Skidmore: there was some festival in town and lots of guys wearing skirts
UVM: too many beanies for a 60 degree day
Colgate:we literally had to stop the car because a bear was in the road
Villanova:kid misheard the tour guide and spent the whole tour thinking the school had 60,000 students, so had already dismissed it
Ok but seems a little harsh for CNU to be judged based on a Wal-Mart’s display decision.
My kid refused to get out of the car at Roanoke College because the buildings seemed old, after we had driven all that way. I was so annoyed.
You are the second poster to post about "refusal to get out of the car." I really can't imagine how ashamed you must be to have raised such a brat. If my kid did that I'd be refusing to help with college.
Ehhh, not the OP, but a parent. I remember back in the day my parents “swinging by” a random school in our way home from a family vacation “just to take a look” and it has never been mentioned in our family, I had never expressed interest in it, and it just lengthened the trip home. I of course did get out and walk around but I too was not mentally into it, and nothing about the trip endeared me to the school. I was very nonplussed by the whole experience.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We toured Clemson when my dd was in elementary school. She couldn’t get over the way it is pronounced (Clempson). The whole tour, she kept muttering, there isn’t a p.
Her best friend just shared she wants to go to Clemson, and she is still struggling with the p.
Hilarious! I have no connection with this school at all, am a native of NoVA, and I do not say it with a “p” sound. Do most people actually pronounce it that way? (?). I (maybe like your daughter) am just pronouncing it as it is spelled? (?).
Without the p sound the s sounds sort of like a /z/. Every person on campus who said the name pronounced it with the p sound- it was worse if they had a strong southern accent. I have to admit I had never noticed, but I can’t stop hearing it ever since. The football announcers say the p too.
She also remembers lots of orange tiger paws on the road, but she liked those.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We toured Clemson when my dd was in elementary school. She couldn’t get over the way it is pronounced (Clempson). The whole tour, she kept muttering, there isn’t a p.
Her best friend just shared she wants to go to Clemson, and she is still struggling with the p.
Hilarious! I have no connection with this school at all, am a native of NoVA, and I do not say it with a “p” sound. Do most people actually pronounce it that way? (?). I (maybe like your daughter) am just pronouncing it as it is spelled? (?).
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We toured a lot of colleges with our kid. Almost all were immediately and often illogically hated and these are the reasons why. This was in spring and fall of 2019.
JMU: the highway and bus system
VT: hokie this and hokie that all day long
CNU: The walmart down the road had the kitchen knife sets locked behind glass
UVA: hated the campus
URochester: yellow jacket mascot
Lafayette: tour guide referenced Harry Potter and a quidditch team
Marist: tour guide mentioned free tutoring too much
Cornell: everyone was walking and eating alone with airpods in
Ithaca: lots of blue and burgundy hair and black clothes, decided to skip the tour completely
Skidmore: there was some festival in town and lots of guys wearing skirts
UVM: too many beanies for a 60 degree day
Colgate:we literally had to stop the car because a bear was in the road
Villanova:kid misheard the tour guide and spent the whole tour thinking the school had 60,000 students, so had already dismissed it
Ok but seems a little harsh for CNU to be judged based on a Wal-Mart’s display decision.
My kid refused to get out of the car at Roanoke College because the buildings seemed old, after we had driven all that way. I was so annoyed.
You are the second poster to post about "refusal to get out of the car." I really can't imagine how ashamed you must be to have raised such a brat. If my kid did that I'd be refusing to help with college.
Ehhh, not the OP, but a parent. I remember back in the day my parents “swinging by” a random school in our way home from a family vacation “just to take a look” and it has never been mentioned in our family, I had never expressed interest in it, and it just lengthened the trip home. I of course did get out and walk around but I too was not mentally into it, and nothing about the trip endeared me to the school. I was very nonplussed by the whole experience.
Anonymous wrote:Harvard: architecture doesn’t match its reputation
Berkeley: so many homeless people right outside the lush campus
Dartmouth: just like my prep school. Only bigger.
Amherst: guessing they have a town vs gown type of rivalry with UMass Amherst
Princeton: so quaint, in a high tea kind of way.
Penn: couldn’t figure it out beyond the main walk
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We toured a lot of colleges with our kid. Almost all were immediately and often illogically hated and these are the reasons why. This was in spring and fall of 2019.
JMU: the highway and bus system
VT: hokie this and hokie that all day long
CNU: The walmart down the road had the kitchen knife sets locked behind glass
UVA: hated the campus
URochester: yellow jacket mascot
Lafayette: tour guide referenced Harry Potter and a quidditch team
Marist: tour guide mentioned free tutoring too much
Cornell: everyone was walking and eating alone with airpods in
Ithaca: lots of blue and burgundy hair and black clothes, decided to skip the tour completely
Skidmore: there was some festival in town and lots of guys wearing skirts
UVM: too many beanies for a 60 degree day
Colgate:we literally had to stop the car because a bear was in the road
Villanova:kid misheard the tour guide and spent the whole tour thinking the school had 60,000 students, so had already dismissed it
Ok but seems a little harsh for CNU to be judged based on a Wal-Mart’s display decision.
My kid refused to get out of the car at Roanoke College because the buildings seemed old, after we had driven all that way. I was so annoyed.
You are the second poster to post about "refusal to get out of the car." I really can't imagine how ashamed you must be to have raised such a brat. If my kid did that I'd be refusing to help with college.
Anonymous wrote:We toured Clemson when my dd was in elementary school. She couldn’t get over the way it is pronounced (Clempson). The whole tour, she kept muttering, there isn’t a p.
Her best friend just shared she wants to go to Clemson, and she is still struggling with the p.
Anonymous wrote:Five College Area - bucolic and classic New England, but seriously in the middle of nowhere aside from the towns of Amherst and Northampton in Western Mass (which is nothing like Eastern Mass)
Skidmore - ugly buildings and depressed downtown
Vassar - Beautiful buildings and depressed town
Dartmouth - pristine, remote, cold, everything was pine green, lots of frat houses and the smell of beer in the air
Brandeis - huge castle on an otherwise modern campus
BU - has the Mass Pike and Storrow Drive running through it