Anonymous wrote:Went there for MBA. Loved it. Undergrads are a bit different/strange and very academically challenged. They seem happy though I swear I never saw one smile. Surprisingly small but active Greek scene from what I observed
Anonymous wrote:I have never met a well adjusted non-nerdy graduate from that school. I am sure they are out there, though.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I loved Chicago. But the school is rather Jewish.
Ugh, really? Family weekend must be a blast, LOL.
Anonymous wrote:I loved Chicago. But the school is rather Jewish.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Chicago's awesome -- great food, live music, interesting theater, Art Institute, nice parks, independent bookstores, decent transit. I spent a couple of years there during grad school and loved it.
The challenge at U of C will be to get out of Hyde Park and see other parts of the city. It's almost like Berkeley to SF which is more of a schlep than Cambridge to Boston.
Chicago - freezing 8months out of the year, then boiling hot for 4, everyone has a layer of fat/blubber, extreme violence (it isn't called chiraq for nothing), boring northside - there's a reason why it is so cheap even with its 'world class bones' compared to cities like boston and even seattle (forget about sf).
It's so shit even moody's has given it a bond rating of almost as bad as detroit
Anonymous wrote:Got BA from there 30 yrs ago when undergrads were all weird and intense. There was definitely partying but yep, in a weird and intense way. Or maybe that was just me and my friends. Is Jimmy's still there? Lived in the Shoreland my first year, a huge old apartment building made into a dorm on the lake, still had a few old people living there.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:College counsellors deal with a broad range of kids and, often, kids whom they don't know at all. So city vs suburb vs small town is a good ice-breaker question. That doesn't mean degree of urbanness must or should be an important criterion for choosing a college. Or that kids who look at some big city schools are likely to have no interest in schools that are commuter rail distance away from a city.
To me, it's crazy to assume that a kid who is interested in U of C is unlikely to be interested in Stanford or Princeton. That said, I can certainly imagine kids who are interested in Stanford or Princeton but no interest in U of C. But it's not an urban/suburban split -- it's about what a kid is looking for.
I went to Stanford, DH went to Princeton, we have a nephew who's a grad student at UofC (Booth). These schools are very different. Even Stanford and Princeton, both suburban schools, are culturally miles apart. A kid who's interested in all 3 is probably going by rankings only and missing out on what's most important.