Anonymous wrote:Would you send your kid to school in DuPont circle? Because that is a pretty good comparison for Hopkins undergrad campus safety,
Anonymous wrote:I was a grad student at the Homewood campus (main campus). It's a city campus. It isn't safe, but seriously no university in a city is safe. You keep your eyes open. Walk with friends. Use the university transportation. Hopkins sent out notifications for crimes, notifications when it was gang initiation season - if a 10 year old approaches you, cross the street. Do not believe they won't assault you. Stuff like that.
Anonymous wrote:My Hopkins doctor was kidnapped, stuffed the car trunk and driven around to ATM's and forced to make withdrawals are gunpoint. He survived but had serious PTSD.
This was not recently. But it was when I was in grad school (at the Medical Campus) there.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:"Johns Hopkins Hospital is surrounded by high crime areas, but this is not true of the university (they are located in two different areas). The area to the north of JHU is home to much of the most expensive real estate in the city. The area to the west is a very trendy neighborhood that is popular with young people and artists, although there are still a lot of older long-time residents there. The neighborhoods to the south are also trendy and popular with young people and college students. It’s a little grittier than the areas to the west and north, but by no means is it a high crime area. The neighborhoods to the east would probably be considered less desirable than the others, but again, they are not high crime areas by any standard."
So this doesn't answer the question about the JHU Homewood campus which is in a different area of the city than Johns Hopkins Hospital
Anonymous wrote:Our DC is applying to universities this year, and we are reading what is happening with safety issues at the University of Chicago, which making us hesitant to apply to campuses with danger levels of safety for students. What do folks think about the safety levels at JHU? Is it in the same boat at UChicago in respect to campus safety for students? Which other top-level university campuses (?Yale, ?UPenn, ?Columbia, etc...) have similar trade-offs that University of Chicago has, that we should consider before making any decisions regarding application or acceptance? Would JHU in particular be on the same safety level as University of Chicago? (Needless to say, for our DC these colleges would be possible etc... but the main question is regarding campus safety)
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:"Johns Hopkins Hospital is surrounded by high crime areas, but this is not true of the university (they are located in two different areas). The area to the north of JHU is home to much of the most expensive real estate in the city. The area to the west is a very trendy neighborhood that is popular with young people and artists, although there are still a lot of older long-time residents there. The neighborhoods to the south are also trendy and popular with young people and college students. It’s a little grittier than the areas to the west and north, but by no means is it a high crime area. The neighborhoods to the east would probably be considered less desirable than the others, but again, they are not high crime areas by any standard."
So this doesn't answer the question about the JHU Homewood campus which is in a different area of the city than Johns Hopkins Hospital