Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I don't know... I generally find OOS public is a dumb idea unless you are talking Berkeley and other schools at that level.
Right, you don’t know. You don’t know much at all.
My kid just didn’t want to be in Appalachia. Nothing wrong with Blacksburg, but you cant call it urban.
VTech will always be hampered by their location.
And their confederate-loving population that surrounds them.
Anonymous wrote:Thanks for all of these valuable insights. My child is having a closer look at some of these institutions mentioned here. Looks like Minnesota and Wisconsin have little merit aid to spare.
My child does like the University of Southern California an awful lot but I confess its location concerns me. The new retail complex is impressive and a great community investment. Can PP speak to the crime and safety situation especially for women?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:University of Vermont especially for a sporty outdoorsy kid
Way too pricy
Anonymous wrote:University of Vermont especially for a sporty outdoorsy kid
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Hard to justify an OOS public if you live in Virginia...unless you get substantial financial aid.
Hard to justify an OOS public over any instate flagship U
You don't get out and see the world much, do you?
My kids go to college to study. They can "see the world" after their education. I don't even know WTF that means for students.
It means going to school with students from all over the country and world; living in a location different from the one you grew up in in terms of geography, infrastructure, politics, and people; learning about and understanding points of view that are different from yours.
out of 4000 Unis in this country, tell me 10 schools that don't meet that criteria
Do you mean "those criteria" or "that criterion"? But point taken for the bolded. From a purely academic standpoint, this is probably accurate. The faculty at flagships are generally top-notch and probably more similar than different in expertise and credentials.
How petty. Maybe PP is a foreign born. Why don't you go build that wall to keep those folks away.
Anonymous wrote:We were shocked at how much we all loved Indiana University in Bloomington. Between the top notch business school, fantastic campus, and generous merit aid, I would not be surprised if DS chose it over UMich and Wisconsin.
Anonymous wrote:We were shocked at how much we all loved Indiana University in Bloomington. Between the top notch business school, fantastic campus, and generous merit aid, I would not be surprised if DS chose it over UMich and Wisconsin.