Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Bottom line is that if any of your kids get in at UNC, OOS or in state, they should thank their lucky stars. If they decide to go elsewhere odds are they will have a great experience, too.
I guess that’s true if you live in a state with mediocre public schools
You are gross.
Why is that gross? If you live in California or Michigan, states with stellar flagships, why would being accepted into UNC over your top instate option be so great? It’s nice, but so is getting into any top 30 school.
Anonymous wrote:Child was a recent OOS grad at UNC. Fantastic experience. Gorgeous campus, school spirit, friendly kids and wonderful academics. Friend group was mostly other OOS students.
Anonymous wrote:i am an alum and have a bunch of OOS friends and IS friends (though I got in IS) and here are some of the things they did:
in my graduating class I knew of one Rhodes and a handful of Fulbrights -- most of those were OOS.
many went to law school and now practice, often in-house somewhere. I did have one big law friend, but she only did that for 5 years before going in-house.
a few went on to get PhDs in Humanities fields, some from Ivies (Yale, Columbia)
many of the high-achieving Instate students I knew were pre-med and are now doctors. Like, a huge number. For some reason, I know more in-state kids who chose this option than OOS... maybe there is a calculation that those people made because they knew they would also have to pay for med school, so paying $4,000 per year for tuition for UNC-CH was extremely prudent.
one was a CS major and is now high up at Apple and works in Cupertino
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Bottom line is that if any of your kids get in at UNC, OOS or in state, they should thank their lucky stars. If they decide to go elsewhere odds are they will have a great experience, too.
I guess that’s true if you live in a state with mediocre public schools
You are gross.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I am a proud OOS graduate of Carolina and reading all these threads of posters going bonkers over the new USNWR rankings of UNC is hilarious. All the theories, all the discounting of why it isn’t really accurate, all the whining (but they take over 80% instate and there is no way North Carolina kids are smart, it’s because of diversity, blah blah blah).
Here’s the come to Jesus: it’s a fantastic school, with a smart, dynamic student body. You get a great education, you have a strong alumni network, excellent school spirit, and great job prospects. Sorry not sorry UVA. Y’all need to deal.
GDTBATH.
It’s much more like UVA than it is like Berkeley, UCLA, or Michigan. The lack of top engineering/no engineering at both schools sets it back a bit.
UNC doesn’t need to be like anything else than what it is. UNC. It’s not UVA, UCLA, Berkeley, Michigan, etc. It (like them) stands alone.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Bottom line is that if any of your kids get in at UNC, OOS or in state, they should thank their lucky stars. If they decide to go elsewhere odds are they will have a great experience, too.
I guess that’s true if you live in a state with mediocre public schools
Anonymous wrote:Do OOS legacy students have a significant edge for admission to UNC?
Anonymous wrote:Bottom line is that if any of your kids get in at UNC, OOS or in state, they should thank their lucky stars. If they decide to go elsewhere odds are they will have a great experience, too.