Anonymous wrote:The other potentially appealing part of urban settings not as available in smaller towns/suburbs is having another large pool of young people in their early 20s for social opportunities (dating or otherwise).
Anonymous wrote:
Of the cities you listed, only Boston is somewhat appealing. The others are crime ridden hell holes.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Because they hear other kids say it. Honestly, how much are these kids really taking advantage of being in a city? It's a stupid trend.
This is a silly comment…my kid takes advantage of the city all the time…gets free tickets to professional sporting events, goes to restaurants, etc.
How is it a “stupid trend” considering some of the oldest, most prestigious universities in the country are located in cities.
New Haven... Baltimore... great cities! /s
Boston, Providence, Philadelphia, New York, Chicago
Of the cities you listed, only Boston is somewhat appealing. The others are crime ridden hell holes.
You sound like someone hiding in your basement watching OAN all day.
They aren’t crime ridden hell holes by any stretch.
I’ve never watched OAN in my life, but anyone with even a shred of common sense knows that those cities are indeed crime ridden. You sound like someone in utter denial.
Anonymous wrote:OMG. THE FOOD. My kid's campus is traditional, quiet, quintessential NE university--leafy, tons of green space, etc...but also next to a city. The campus is defined by itself. The food options are some of the best in the country, and great places to stay when we visit. We could go out to 4-5 top restaurants every time we go up and still not hit them all by the time they graduate. Lots of art and cultural stuff as well.
My spouse wants to move there. lol
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Because they hear other kids say it. Honestly, how much are these kids really taking advantage of being in a city? It's a stupid trend.
This is a silly comment…my kid takes advantage of the city all the time…gets free tickets to professional sporting events, goes to restaurants, etc.
How is it a “stupid trend” considering some of the oldest, most prestigious universities in the country are located in cities.
New Haven... Baltimore... great cities! /s
Boston, Providence, Philadelphia, New York, Chicago
Of the cities you listed, only Boston is somewhat appealing. The others are crime ridden hell holes.
You sound like someone hiding in your basement watching OAN all day.
They aren’t crime ridden hell holes by any stretch.
I’ve never watched OAN in my life, but anyone with even a shred of common sense knows that those cities are indeed crime ridden. You sound like someone in utter denial.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If everything else is equal, why would anyone choose middle of nowhere vs a city.
What would you choose(hypothetically), Cornell in Ithaca or Cornell in Boston or NYC
LOL
Because people are different and like different things.
Why are the urban campus boosters so defensive? Why not just accept that not everyone likes the big city? It’s ok if you do. It’s ok if I don’t.
+100
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If everything else is equal, why would anyone choose middle of nowhere vs a city.
What would you choose(hypothetically), Cornell in Ithaca or Cornell in Boston or NYC
LOL
Because people are different and like different things.
Why are the urban campus boosters so defensive? Why not just accept that not everyone likes the big city? It’s ok if you do. It’s ok if I don’t.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Because they hear other kids say it. Honestly, how much are these kids really taking advantage of being in a city? It's a stupid trend.
This is a silly comment…my kid takes advantage of the city all the time…gets free tickets to professional sporting events, goes to restaurants, etc.
How is it a “stupid trend” considering some of the oldest, most prestigious universities in the country are located in cities.
New Haven... Baltimore... great cities! /s
Boston, Providence, Philadelphia, New York, Chicago
Of the cities you listed, only Boston is somewhat appealing. The others are crime ridden hell holes.
You sound like someone hiding in your basement watching OAN all day.
They aren’t crime ridden hell holes by any stretch.
Yes. Many people I know commute to NYC (yes, on the daily) via the NJ Transit out of Princeton Junction stationAnonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Just looking at the USNews rankings of the top 50 National colleges, the breakdown is as follows:
12 of the top 20 are in cities, with Providence the smallest city;
3 of the 20 are suburbs of large cities (Stanford, CalTech and UCB);
2 of the 20 are small cities (ND and Duke);
1 is Princeton which is hard to classify...not a city, not a suburb, but definitely a little hamlet within NJ sprawl
2 of the 20 are I guess rural...Cornell and Dartmouth
Of the top 50:
28 are in cities
6 are in suburbs of large cities
11 are in small/medium cities
5 are I guess rural/ruralish (Princeton, Dartmouth, Cornell, Purdue, UGA)
It's not necessarily that kids want an urban campus, but they want a top 50 school...and that's where they are.
Princeton is a suburb
- Princeton, NJ resident
A suburb of NYC, I gather is your claim? I suppose it is equivalent to Stanford to San Francisco.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Just looking at the USNews rankings of the top 50 National colleges, the breakdown is as follows:
12 of the top 20 are in cities, with Providence the smallest city;
3 of the 20 are suburbs of large cities (Stanford, CalTech and UCB);
2 of the 20 are small cities (ND and Duke);
1 is Princeton which is hard to classify...not a city, not a suburb, but definitely a little hamlet within NJ sprawl
2 of the 20 are I guess rural...Cornell and Dartmouth
Of the top 50:
28 are in cities
6 are in suburbs of large cities
11 are in small/medium cities
5 are I guess rural/ruralish (Princeton, Dartmouth, Cornell, Purdue, UGA)
It's not necessarily that kids want an urban campus, but they want a top 50 school...and that's where they are.
Princeton is a suburb
- Princeton, NJ resident
Anonymous wrote:Just looking at the USNews rankings of the top 50 National colleges, the breakdown is as follows:
12 of the top 20 are in cities, with Providence the smallest city;
3 of the 20 are suburbs of large cities (Stanford, CalTech and UCB);
2 of the 20 are small cities (ND and Duke);
1 is Princeton which is hard to classify...not a city, not a suburb, but definitely a little hamlet within NJ sprawl
2 of the 20 are I guess rural...Cornell and Dartmouth
Of the top 50:
28 are in cities
6 are in suburbs of large cities
11 are in small/medium cities
5 are I guess rural/ruralish (Princeton, Dartmouth, Cornell, Purdue, UGA)
It's not necessarily that kids want an urban campus, but they want a top 50 school...and that's where they are.