Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Columbia definitely has its issues. Would not recommend it to most kids. Univ administration is horribly apathetic re most issues. So are the faculty. Expect your DC to get no responses whatsoever to emails etc from univ admin and to be taught by adjuncts/lecturers for most of their time there. The top names that make Columbia famous will simply not touch undergrad teaching (with rare exceptions).
This is pretty much any big school though.
Anonymous wrote:
This is a dumb post. Are you trying to say only Caltech and MIT are intense? Why speak about things you know nothing about?
No, I am saying Columbia is not known for its mathematics and hard sciences so the super intense people in those majors would be elsewhere
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Except ops kid is all over the map with bizarre school choices Florida state ? Come on really?
She is immature some other reason is making her choose those schools
+1. If the DD decided to, say, switch from math to environmental science and identified a set schools strong in that field. I could understand. But these choices make no sense. I am on Team Dad until and unless the DD is able to articulate why she chose those schools.
I would also suggest maybe letting your DD take some time off from school as a mental health break. Most schools have programs now so that you can re-enter without having to reapply.
Also, I am having a hard time believing that math at Columbia is filled with super-intense people. It’s not Caltech or MIT…
This is a dumb post. Are you trying to say only Caltech and MIT are intense? Why speak about things you know nothing about?
No, I am saying Columbia is not known for its mathematics and hard sciences so the super intense people in those majors would be elsewhere
It has excellent hard sciences actually. Many top research scientists are at Columbia. Premed at Columbia is brutal
Anonymous wrote:Columbia definitely has its issues. Would not recommend it to most kids. Univ administration is horribly apathetic re most issues. So are the faculty. Expect your DC to get no responses whatsoever to emails etc from univ admin and to be taught by adjuncts/lecturers for most of their time there. The top names that make Columbia famous will simply not touch undergrad teaching (with rare exceptions).
Anonymous wrote:It’s not that easy to transfer sophomore year
Have her come home community college then reapply
Her list is garbage honestly penn state Florida state to Colgate WTH? Who made that list ?
I agree with DH she stays or community college then she pays school of her choice
It’s not because her current school is an ivy that I agree with him it’s because she’s immature clearly from her list and should not be a four year school
She’s immature not college ready
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Except ops kid is all over the map with bizarre school choices Florida state ? Come on really?
She is immature some other reason is making her choose those schools
+1. If the DD decided to, say, switch from math to environmental science and identified a set schools strong in that field. I could understand. But these choices make no sense. I am on Team Dad until and unless the DD is able to articulate why she chose those schools.
I would also suggest maybe letting your DD take some time off from school as a mental health break. Most schools have programs now so that you can re-enter without having to reapply.
Also, I am having a hard time believing that math at Columbia is filled with super-intense people. It’s not Caltech or MIT…
This is a dumb post. Are you trying to say only Caltech and MIT are intense? Why speak about things you know nothing about?
No, I am saying Columbia is not known for its mathematics and hard sciences so the super intense people in those majors would be elsewhere
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Avoid Cornell. Lots of pressure & lots of SAD related depression.
Suggesting Cornell is very poor advice.
What are you basing it on? My kid is a sophomore there and doing well. She has many friends who seem well-adjusted.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I’d push for Cornell. They have a lot of kids who transfer in as sophomores, so they’re set up for it in terms of welcoming them into the fold. Yes, it’s in a small town, but it’s a huge school with sports, Greek life and tons of clubs. And it has the academic intensity that she can do well in. I think it’s an option that can meet everyone’s needs.
If nothing else, I’d look into counseling for your daughter. Her mental health is key, and clearly she needs some support with whatever decision she decides to make. There’s no guarantee that all of her issues will be resolved with a change of scenery.
Most transfers have guaranteed transfer option that was granted contingent on completing first year courses at another school.
Anonymous wrote:Is Michigan a lot less intense than Columbia? Genuinely interested to know. As such, does the comparison hold for non-engineering, non-math areas as well? Say, economics or political science?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Except ops kid is all over the map with bizarre school choices Florida state ? Come on really?
She is immature some other reason is making her choose those schools
+1. If the DD decided to, say, switch from math to environmental science and identified a set schools strong in that field. I could understand. But these choices make no sense. I am on Team Dad until and unless the DD is able to articulate why she chose those schools.
I would also suggest maybe letting your DD take some time off from school as a mental health break. Most schools have programs now so that you can re-enter without having to reapply.
Also, I am having a hard time believing that math at Columbia is filled with super-intense people. It’s not Caltech or MIT…
This is a dumb post. Are you trying to say only Caltech and MIT are intense? Why speak about things you know nothing about?