Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:St Joe's PA, Hofstra NY, Earlham IN, Campbell NC, Radford, Northern AZ, Shenandoah - many great options
St. Joes bought U of the Sciences last year, which is in West Philly located near Penn & Drexel. I live there and often see SJU shuttle buses that say something like “Hawks in University City” that are presumably going back & forth from there to their main campus outside the city. Not sure if they have undergrads at both campuses.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Example: the University of Arizona is still taking applications and offering financial aid.
So are Alfred University, Hofstra and Pace in New York; Whittier in California; and South Dakota State, which is only about $25,000 all in for out-of-state students:
https://www.nacacnet.org/college-openings-update/
You might want to investigate Whittier a little further before going that route.
https://www.latimes.com/california/story/2023-03-30/whittier-college-hit-with-low-enrollment-financial-woes
That’s going to be the case for most of the privates on that list. Make of that what you will.
Anonymous wrote:St Joe's PA, Hofstra NY, Earlham IN, Campbell NC, Radford, Northern AZ, Shenandoah - many great options
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Example: the University of Arizona is still taking applications and offering financial aid.
So are Alfred University, Hofstra and Pace in New York; Whittier in California; and South Dakota State, which is only about $25,000 all in for out-of-state students:
https://www.nacacnet.org/college-openings-update/
You might want to investigate Whittier a little further before going that route.
https://www.latimes.com/california/story/2023-03-30/whittier-college-hit-with-low-enrollment-financial-woes
Anonymous wrote:Example: the University of Arizona is still taking applications and offering financial aid.
So are Alfred University, Hofstra and Pace in New York; Whittier in California; and South Dakota State, which is only about $25,000 all in for out-of-state students:
https://www.nacacnet.org/college-openings-update/
Anonymous wrote:Surprised at the number of Pennsylvania colleges on the list plus Mary Washington, SUNY Oswego, Pace, Hofstra, Towson, Salisbury, University of Dayton.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:NMSU great option for the science kids
Lots of good schools on this list.
+1 Surprised by Penn State, Colorado, UNC Asheville, Lawrence, Marquette, Sewanee/University of the South, Ithaca, and St. Mary’s in CA.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Penn State, University Park(main campus) will not be an option. And, as a poster mentioned, all branch campuses are 2 years minimum. Some campuses provide 4 year degrees depending on the major.
- PA resident
2 year branch campuses can be really great experience. Much more of a stepping stone. They seem to attract good faculty and small class sizes and the students bond much more. My sister did this and the connections she made with professors far exceeded mine (same degree but at the main college) and her subsequent recommendation letters got her into Ivy law school. Im not sure why more people don’t see these as an asset.
+1. People get caught up in prestige. But statistically, a very good student at a school with lots of mediocre ones does better than if he'd gone somewhere he was average or below, and part of it is because the faculty are going to notice him. And those faculty are quite possibly going to be more drawn towards teaching than research, since the latter is usually what gets you the attention from schools with higher rankings.