Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Davidson
UVA
W&M
Econ, then Econ PhD
Money is not an issue
This is no brainer. UVA. It has a strong Econ program which will give your kid a leg up for graduate school applications.
Signed Ph.D economist.
Anonymous wrote:Slight lean to UGA, unless your student plans to stay in Florida after. Athens > Gainesville for college town, plus easy to get to Atlanta. Gainesville a couple hours or more to almost everything.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:CMU - grant $37K, has to apply for annual renewal
URochester - scholarship $14K annually
UNC - scholarship $4.7K annually
UVA
W&M
intended major Biology or Chemistry
Prefers mid size, not into sports or greek
I’d go UNC. But I don’t know what CMU is
Anonymous wrote:UMass
Eckerd
Ithaca
UMD
Anonymous wrote:CMU - grant $37K, has to apply for annual renewal
URochester - scholarship $14K annually
UNC - scholarship $4.7K annually
UVA
W&M
intended major Biology or Chemistry
Prefers mid size, not into sports or greek
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Davidson
UVA
W&M
Econ, then Econ PhD
Money is not an issue
This is no brainer. UVA. It has a strong Econ program which will give your kid a leg up for graduate school applications.
Signed Ph.D economist.
Davidson and W&M have a higher percentage of graduates that get PhDs in Economics than UVA based on government tracking data.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:UNC (full ride)
UCLA
Barnard
Cornell
Vassar
OOS for all. Law, social justice, poli sci orientation.
Money is a factor but doesn’t have to be the only factor.
We’re struggling with this so any insight is useful!
This isn’t even close. UNC.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Davidson
UVA
W&M
Econ, then Econ PhD
Money is not an issue
This is no brainer. UVA. It has a strong Econ program which will give your kid a leg up for graduate school applications.
Signed Ph.D economist.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:University of Florida or University of Georgia for business/finance. Both out of state, both full pay at almost the same total cost.
Georgia, better college town and doesn’t rely on online classes.
What’s better about Athens? Genuinely curious. They both have about the same size population, similar size universities, similarly ranked universities (guessing they draw a very similar type of student), very similar demographics, similar numbers in terms of HHI, poverty. I’m just wondering what sets Athens apart as a better college town?
I believe UF is much higher ranked.
Correct. So, again, what makes Athens a better college town?
It routinely shows up on the list of best college towns because of its charm, music scene (where REM got its start), and hug number of bars and restaurants. It’s also just an hour from Atlanta
Gainesville also has a big music scene where a lot of famous bands got their start, and a huge number of bars and restaurants and is not that far from several major cities: Tampa, Orlando, Jacksonville...I just am not convinced Athens is better.
Much better weather than Gainesville (swampy and humid) more to do, shops, restaurants, bars, close to Atlanta, more bars. Biggest pro is business school isn't online. Pro of Florida is it's cheaper. Everyone loves them both so it's hard choice.
Like what? Gainesville is bigger than Athens and UF is bigger than UGA so if anything one would think there’d be more to do in Gainesville.
Anonymous wrote:Davidson
UVA
W&M
Econ, then Econ PhD
Money is not an issue
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:University of Florida or University of Georgia for business/finance. Both out of state, both full pay at almost the same total cost.
Georgia, better college town and doesn’t rely on online classes.
What’s better about Athens? Genuinely curious. They both have about the same size population, similar size universities, similarly ranked universities (guessing they draw a very similar type of student), very similar demographics, similar numbers in terms of HHI, poverty. I’m just wondering what sets Athens apart as a better college town?
I believe UF is much higher ranked.
Correct. So, again, what makes Athens a better college town?
It routinely shows up on the list of best college towns because of its charm, music scene (where REM got its start), and hug number of bars and restaurants. It’s also just an hour from Atlanta
Gainesville also has a big music scene where a lot of famous bands got their start, and a huge number of bars and restaurants and is not that far from several major cities: Tampa, Orlando, Jacksonville...I just am not convinced Athens is better.
Much better weather than Gainesville (swampy and humid) more to do, shops, restaurants, bars, close to Atlanta, more bars. Biggest pro is business school isn't online. Pro of Florida is it's cheaper. Everyone loves them both so it's hard choice.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:University of Florida or University of Georgia for business/finance. Both out of state, both full pay at almost the same total cost.
Georgia, better college town and doesn’t rely on online classes.
What’s better about Athens? Genuinely curious. They both have about the same size population, similar size universities, similarly ranked universities (guessing they draw a very similar type of student), very similar demographics, similar numbers in terms of HHI, poverty. I’m just wondering what sets Athens apart as a better college town?
I believe UF is much higher ranked.
Correct. So, again, what makes Athens a better college town?
It routinely shows up on the list of best college towns because of its charm, music scene (where REM got its start), and hug number of bars and restaurants. It’s also just an hour from Atlanta
Gainesville also has a big music scene where a lot of famous bands got their start, and a huge number of bars and restaurants and is not that far from several major cities: Tampa, Orlando, Jacksonville...I just am not convinced Athens is better.
Much better weather than Gainesville (swampy and humid) more to do, shops, restaurants, bars, close to Atlanta, more bars. Biggest pro is business school isn't online. Pro of Florida is it's cheaper. Everyone loves them both so it's hard choice.
Anonymous wrote:University of Florida or University of Georgia for business/finance. Both out of state, both full pay at almost the same total cost.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:University of Florida or University of Georgia for business/finance. Both out of state, both full pay at almost the same total cost.
Georgia, better college town and doesn’t rely on online classes.
What’s better about Athens? Genuinely curious. They both have about the same size population, similar size universities, similarly ranked universities (guessing they draw a very similar type of student), very similar demographics, similar numbers in terms of HHI, poverty. I’m just wondering what sets Athens apart as a better college town?
I believe UF is much higher ranked.
Correct. So, again, what makes Athens a better college town?
It routinely shows up on the list of best college towns because of its charm, music scene (where REM got its start), and hug number of bars and restaurants. It’s also just an hour from Atlanta
Gainesville also has a big music scene where a lot of famous bands got their start, and a huge number of bars and restaurants and is not that far from several major cities: Tampa, Orlando, Jacksonville...I just am not convinced Athens is better.