Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
Northeastern for CS
+1. No doubt.
I kind of hate the Northeastern experience. I think your kid would really have to love the moving around and internships, etc. I have a niece who loved it and my kid absolutely not interested. Even though BU and BC are very different, my kid has them both on his list.
Boston campus of Northeastern doesn’t really matter because it’s unlikely that’s where kid will spend most of his time.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
Northeastern for CS
+1. No doubt.
I kind of hate the Northeastern experience. I think your kid would really have to love the moving around and internships, etc. I have a niece who loved it and my kid absolutely not interested. Even though BU and BC are very different, my kid has them both on his list.
Anonymous wrote:Northeastern's campus is a lot nicer than BU's if that sort of thing moves your needle.
Be careful of the salty folks who dislike all three schools. Their admission rates are so low they're ripe for slings and arrows from rejected parents.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Maybe Boston will fade away and become a rotting urban zombie battle zone, but for right now:
The rest of the world, like China, India, Korea, Japan, UK, Germany value a US education. Especially in STEM areas.
And Boston is their Mecca, with UC's their Al Aqsa. So schools like BU and Northeastern will be around for a long, long time.
Haha. Everyone wants Harvard and MIT. But Northeastern? It's dropping back to reality. The illusion of the commuter college climbing the rankings with no endowment and a five-year plan for everyone is over.
I don't think you are familiar with the sbject at all and stuck in the 70s. BU has been very popular to international students. NU's popularity has been rising rapidly as well. In fact a complaint is that they allocate too many seats for international students.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Why the focus on Boston? None of these is all that great.
What do you mean why? Location is one of the important factors for many people if you didn't know.
Also, Northeastern is close to great for CS and engineering.
It was the first university that stood up separate whole college of computer science in the 80s.
Ranked #12 on https://csrankings.org/
Gets huge respect from the industry
https://www.collegetransitions.com/dataverse/top-feeders-tech
Boston's best days are long ago. It's now a bad combination of high COL, but in a dying region. And it missed its shot on tech decades ago. Maybe you're good with your kid being the IT guy somewhere, but serious CS is mostly in the bay area, Seattle, and Austin, with significant work going on in CO, NYC, NOVA, Philly, and Portland. What does Boston got?
And NU is about to return to the mean, after decades of playing rankings games. And with almost no endowment, it'll be hard for them to stop the slide.
If you don't like Boston. That's fine. It's mainly personal preference.
Also, you can't game the outcomes and respect from the industry.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Why the focus on Boston? None of these is all that great.
What do you mean why? Location is one of the important factors for many people if you didn't know.
Also, Northeastern is close to great for CS and engineering.
It was the first university that stood up separate whole college of computer science in the 80s.
Ranked #12 on https://csrankings.org/
Gets huge respect from the industry
https://www.collegetransitions.com/dataverse/top-feeders-tech
Boston's best days are long ago. It's now a bad combination of high COL, but in a dying region. And it missed its shot on tech decades ago. Maybe you're good with your kid being the IT guy somewhere, but serious CS is mostly in the bay area, Seattle, and Austin, with significant work going on in CO, NYC, NOVA, Philly, and Portland. What does Boston got?
And NU is about to return to the mean, after decades of playing rankings games. And with almost no endowment, it'll be hard for them to stop the slide.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Why the focus on Boston? None of these is all that great.
What do you mean why? Location is one of the important factors for many people if you didn't know.
Also, Northeastern is close to great for CS and engineering.
It was the first university that stood up separate whole college of computer science in the 80s.
Ranked #12 on https://csrankings.org/
Gets huge respect from the industry
https://www.collegetransitions.com/dataverse/top-feeders-tech
Boston's best days are long ago. It's now a bad combination of high COL, but in a dying region. And it missed its shot on tech decades ago. Maybe you're good with your kid being the IT guy somewhere, but serious CS is mostly in the bay area, Seattle, and Austin, with significant work going on in CO, NYC, NOVA, Philly, and Portland. What does Boston got?
And NU is about to return to the mean, after decades of playing rankings games. And with almost no endowment, it'll be hard for them to stop the slide.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Why the focus on Boston? None of these is all that great.
What do you mean why? Location is one of the important factors for many people if you didn't know.
Also, Northeastern is close to great for CS and engineering.
It was the first university that stood up separate whole college of computer science in the 80s.
Ranked #12 on https://csrankings.org/
Gets huge respect from the industry
https://www.collegetransitions.com/dataverse/top-feeders-tech
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Why the focus on Boston? None of these is all that great.
What do you mean why? Location is one of the important factors for many people if you didn't know.
Also, Northeastern is close to great for CS and engineering.
It was the first university that stood up separate whole college of computer science in the 80s.
Ranked #12 on https://csrankings.org/
Gets huge respect from the industry
https://www.collegetransitions.com/dataverse/top-feeders-tech
Anonymous wrote:Why the focus on Boston? None of these is all that great.