Anonymous wrote:To 12:30
BASIS will end its 7th year in DC this spring. The students graduating this year began as 6th graders the year it opened.
They are on the whole a bright and hard-working cohort.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:PP. that list is helpful. The results are fine but certainly nothing to brag about. A lot of those schools will take just about anybody.
That was the class of 2018.
The "well-known/relatively more selective schools" I've heard of so far (not more are coming out later in March) for this year's graduates include:
Barnard
Cambridge
Oxford
Grinnell
Kenyon
Purdue Engineering
US Naval Academy
Univ of Edinburgh
Interesting that they had at least 2 different kids applying to UK schools (Oxbridge & Edinburgh). Seems sort of unusual for the area. I wonder what the link is.
Kids who know what they want to study and are eager to finish their degree in 3 years, saving $$ over schools in the US?
One student in the class of 2018 is enrolled in Spain. Seems overseas universities are popular among those kids.
My DC is graduating from BASIS this year and seriously considered McGill and U of Toronto but decided not to in the end.
You really can't change fields of study easily at UK schools, whereas a majority of US students change their desired major field during college. The U.S. also has a more fluid labor market, so grads need flexible skills.
Overall, for a kid who will probably work in the US, I prefer a U.S. school. The unemployment rate is also generally about 8% in the Eurozone. It's lower in the UK, although with Brexit, who knows. Aiming for the US labor market is usually a better bet.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:PP. that list is helpful. The results are fine but certainly nothing to brag about. A lot of those schools will take just about anybody.
That was the class of 2018.
The "well-known/relatively more selective schools" I've heard of so far (not more are coming out later in March) for this year's graduates include:
Barnard
Cambridge
Oxford
Grinnell
Kenyon
Purdue Engineering
US Naval Academy
Univ of Edinburgh
Interesting that they had at least 2 different kids applying to UK schools (Oxbridge & Edinburgh). Seems sort of unusual for the area. I wonder what the link is.
Kids who know what they want to study and are eager to finish their degree in 3 years, saving $$ over schools in the US?
One student in the class of 2018 is enrolled in Spain. Seems overseas universities are popular among those kids.
My DC is graduating from BASIS this year and seriously considered McGill and U of Toronto but decided not to in the end.
You really can't change fields of study easily at UK schools, whereas a majority of US students change their desired major field during college. The U.S. also has a more fluid labor market, so grads need flexible skills.
Overall, for a kid who will probably work in the US, I prefer a U.S. school. The unemployment rate is also generally about 8% in the Eurozone. It's lower in the UK, although with Brexit, who knows. Aiming for the US labor market is usually a better bet.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:PP. that list is helpful. The results are fine but certainly nothing to brag about. A lot of those schools will take just about anybody.
That was the class of 2018.
The "well-known/relatively more selective schools" I've heard of so far (not more are coming out later in March) for this year's graduates include:
Barnard
Cambridge
Oxford
Grinnell
Kenyon
Purdue Engineering
US Naval Academy
Univ of Edinburgh
Interesting that they had at least 2 different kids applying to UK schools (Oxbridge & Edinburgh). Seems sort of unusual for the area. I wonder what the link is.
Kids who know what they want to study and are eager to finish their degree in 3 years, saving $$ over schools in the US?
One student in the class of 2018 is enrolled in Spain. Seems overseas universities are popular among those kids.
My DC is graduating from BASIS this year and seriously considered McGill and U of Toronto but decided not to in the end.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:2 BASIS seniors admitted to MIT (one was also an Oxbridge admit).
Oxbridge? The student got into MIT, Oxford, and Cambridge?
Anonymous wrote:2 BASIS seniors admitted to MIT (one was also an Oxbridge admit).
Anonymous wrote:2 BASIS seniors admitted to MIT (one was also an Oxbridge admit).
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:PP. that list is helpful. The results are fine but certainly nothing to brag about. A lot of those schools will take just about anybody.
That was the class of 2018.
The "well-known/relatively more selective schools" I've heard of so far (not more are coming out later in March) for this year's graduates include:
Barnard
Cambridge
Oxford
Grinnell
Kenyon
Purdue Engineering
US Naval Academy
Univ of Edinburgh
Interesting that they had at least 2 different kids applying to UK schools (Oxbridge & Edinburgh). Seems sort of unusual for the area. I wonder what the link is.
Kids who know what they want to study and are eager to finish their degree in 3 years, saving $$ over schools in the US?
One student in the class of 2018 is enrolled in Spain. Seems overseas universities are popular among those kids.
My DC is graduating from BASIS this year and seriously considered McGill and U of Toronto but decided not to in the end.
I don't disagree. My husband is actually a Cambridge grad, so we've always thought that this might be an option for our DD. But whereas I've seen Canadian schools on lots of DC college destination lists, I've only seen UK schools a handful of times... so at least 2 different students applying from a small class seemed unusual and I wondered if there was some teacher/administrator with a connection.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:PP. that list is helpful. The results are fine but certainly nothing to brag about. A lot of those schools will take just about anybody.
That was the class of 2018.
The "well-known/relatively more selective schools" I've heard of so far (not more are coming out later in March) for this year's graduates include:
Barnard
Cambridge
Oxford
Grinnell
Kenyon
Purdue Engineering
US Naval Academy
Univ of Edinburgh
Interesting that they had at least 2 different kids applying to UK schools (Oxbridge & Edinburgh). Seems sort of unusual for the area. I wonder what the link is.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:PP. that list is helpful. The results are fine but certainly nothing to brag about. A lot of those schools will take just about anybody.
That was the class of 2018.
The "well-known/relatively more selective schools" I've heard of so far (not more are coming out later in March) for this year's graduates include:
Barnard
Cambridge
Oxford
Grinnell
Kenyon
Purdue Engineering
US Naval Academy
Univ of Edinburgh
Interesting that they had at least 2 different kids applying to UK schools (Oxbridge & Edinburgh). Seems sort of unusual for the area. I wonder what the link is.
Kids who know what they want to study and are eager to finish their degree in 3 years, saving $$ over schools in the US?
One student in the class of 2018 is enrolled in Spain. Seems overseas universities are popular among those kids.
My DC is graduating from BASIS this year and seriously considered McGill and U of Toronto but decided not to in the end.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:PP. that list is helpful. The results are fine but certainly nothing to brag about. A lot of those schools will take just about anybody.
That was the class of 2018.
The "well-known/relatively more selective schools" I've heard of so far (not more are coming out later in March) for this year's graduates include:
Barnard
Cambridge
Oxford
Grinnell
Kenyon
Purdue Engineering
US Naval Academy
Univ of Edinburgh
Interesting that they had at least 2 different kids applying to UK schools (Oxbridge & Edinburgh). Seems sort of unusual for the area. I wonder what the link is.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:PP. that list is helpful. The results are fine but certainly nothing to brag about. A lot of those schools will take just about anybody.
That was the class of 2018.
The "well-known/relatively more selective schools" I've heard of so far (not more are coming out later in March) for this year's graduates include:
Barnard
Cambridge
Oxford
Grinnell
Kenyon
Purdue Engineering
US Naval Academy
Univ of Edinburgh