Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My DC is at USC and loves it. She knows when to walk alone, when to be with friends, when to use the LYFT or Uber. The friends look out for each other and they have no hesitation having fun both on campus and off. It requires basic big city street smarts. The campus is beautiful with Beach, skiing, all accessible. Great sports, smart kids, strong programs and schools. It’s definitely not for everyone though and you probably know if your kid would be happy in big city bright lights that LA is. If they won’t venture off campus to make the best of the what the city offers, they probably won’t thrive at USC.
I always laugh when tourists think that the beaches around LA are so great. They are very polluted, crowded, full of freaks, and
cold for most of the year college students will be in class. Other than a view of the water, there really isn’t much to recommend.
What beach are you going to? Because I go to Zuma and it’s pretty darn stunning. LA beaches are broad with soft sand, and really nice actually. The cold water is main issue.
I go to a real beach in a warm climate where you can actually enjoy the water without a wetsuit.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My DC is at USC and loves it. She knows when to walk alone, when to be with friends, when to use the LYFT or Uber. The friends look out for each other and they have no hesitation having fun both on campus and off. It requires basic big city street smarts. The campus is beautiful with Beach, skiing, all accessible. Great sports, smart kids, strong programs and schools. It’s definitely not for everyone though and you probably know if your kid would be happy in big city bright lights that LA is. If they won’t venture off campus to make the best of the what the city offers, they probably won’t thrive at USC.
I always laugh when tourists think that the beaches around LA are so great. They are very polluted, crowded, full of freaks, and
cold for most of the year college students will be in class. Other than a view of the water, there really isn’t much to recommend.
What beach are you going to? Because I go to Zuma and it’s pretty darn stunning. LA beaches are broad with soft sand, and really nice actually. The cold water is main issue.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My DC is at USC and loves it. She knows when to walk alone, when to be with friends, when to use the LYFT or Uber. The friends look out for each other and they have no hesitation having fun both on campus and off. It requires basic big city street smarts. The campus is beautiful with Beach, skiing, all accessible. Great sports, smart kids, strong programs and schools. It’s definitely not for everyone though and you probably know if your kid would be happy in big city bright lights that LA is. If they won’t venture off campus to make the best of the what the city offers, they probably won’t thrive at USC.
I always laugh when tourists think that the beaches around LA are so great. They are very polluted, crowded, full of freaks, and
cold for most of the year college students will be in class. Other than a view of the water, there really isn’t much to recommend.
Anonymous wrote:My DC is at USC and loves it. She knows when to walk alone, when to be with friends, when to use the LYFT or Uber. The friends look out for each other and they have no hesitation having fun both on campus and off. It requires basic big city street smarts. The campus is beautiful with Beach, skiing, all accessible. Great sports, smart kids, strong programs and schools. It’s definitely not for everyone though and you probably know if your kid would be happy in big city bright lights that LA is. If they won’t venture off campus to make the best of the what the city offers, they probably won’t thrive at USC.
Anonymous wrote:Yes! I'm an alum and can tell you from first-hand experience that it's very rough[b]. With that said, the school has a great security team.[/quote
Angelino here. This. It's two exit ramps from Watts. I wouldn't send my kid there.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Not sure if you live in the DMV, but to try to give you an analogy:
I would say USC is located in the equivalent of like Gallaudet or Catholic University in the district. Downtown LA has gentrified quite a bit and is now a fairly lively place vs. it used to kind of be a ghost town 20 years ago. USC is not directly adjacent to downtown LA...there are some rough areas in between and you want to have good street smarts.
I would say UCLA is located in the equivalent of Bethesda. Westwood is a nice area and UMC. Now, directly north of UCLA (like it starts across the street from UCLA at the end of campus) is Bel Air which of course is an incredibly high end area of $20MM+ homes, but it is residential with private estates...students are not venturing into the area unless they snag an invite to the Playboy Mansion (is it even still the Playboy Mansion?) which I think is within a 1/2 mile of UCLA.
Um, no. Brookland (where Catholic is located) is a far safer area than the area surrounding USC. I grew up in LA and live in Brookland now. You cannot compare those two areas.
I agree - Brookland is safer and not a good comparison. Also, Brookland is different in nature to start.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Not sure if you live in the DMV, but to try to give you an analogy:
I would say USC is located in the equivalent of like Gallaudet or Catholic University in the district. Downtown LA has gentrified quite a bit and is now a fairly lively place vs. it used to kind of be a ghost town 20 years ago. USC is not directly adjacent to downtown LA...there are some rough areas in between and you want to have good street smarts.
I would say UCLA is located in the equivalent of Bethesda. Westwood is a nice area and UMC. Now, directly north of UCLA (like it starts across the street from UCLA at the end of campus) is Bel Air which of course is an incredibly high end area of $20MM+ homes, but it is residential with private estates...students are not venturing into the area unless they snag an invite to the Playboy Mansion (is it even still the Playboy Mansion?) which I think is within a 1/2 mile of UCLA.
Um, no. Brookland (where Catholic is located) is a far safer area than the area surrounding USC. I grew up in LA and live in Brookland now. You cannot compare those two areas.
Anonymous wrote:Not sure if you live in the DMV, but to try to give you an analogy:
I would say USC is located in the equivalent of like Gallaudet or Catholic University in the district. Downtown LA has gentrified quite a bit and is now a fairly lively place vs. it used to kind of be a ghost town 20 years ago. USC is not directly adjacent to downtown LA...there are some rough areas in between and you want to have good street smarts.
I would say UCLA is located in the equivalent of Bethesda. Westwood is a nice area and UMC. Now, directly north of UCLA (like it starts across the street from UCLA at the end of campus) is Bel Air which of course is an incredibly high end area of $20MM+ homes, but it is residential with private estates...students are not venturing into the area unless they snag an invite to the Playboy Mansion (is it even still the Playboy Mansion?) which I think is within a 1/2 mile of UCLA.
Anonymous wrote:Not sure if you live in the DMV, but to try to give you an analogy:
I would say USC is located in the equivalent of like Gallaudet or Catholic University in the district. Downtown LA has gentrified quite a bit and is now a fairly lively place vs. it used to kind of be a ghost town 20 years ago. USC is not directly adjacent to downtown LA...there are some rough areas in between and you want to have good street smarts.
I would say UCLA is located in the equivalent of Bethesda. Westwood is a nice area and UMC. Now, directly north of UCLA (like it starts across the street from UCLA at the end of campus) is Bel Air which of course is an incredibly high end area of $20MM+ homes, but it is residential with private estates...students are not venturing into the area unless they snag an invite to the Playboy Mansion (is it even still the Playboy Mansion?) which I think is within a 1/2 mile of UCLA.