Anonymous wrote:If your kid jumps through all the high school hoops required to get into a Top 25 university, college is almost certainly going to be a much lower intensity environment than high school, regardless of where they go
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If your kid is laid back, they will be laid back anywhere. If your kid is high stress, they will be high stress anywhere. It's not the college, it's the kid
This 100%
This is true to a certain extent. And, my kid self-reports and appears to be more relaxed in relaxed environments. NOT party environments. So maybe not Uva, although thank you for the poster who had that list!!
How do you find out what the laid back schools are outside DCUM?
I believe Niche has a dashboard that shows the top 3-4 self descriptors that students provide via poll. For my DC’s college, it is accurate!
Anonymous wrote:yes, I am concerned about prestige, but we also want a school that is nice, friendly.
Do they exist? When I Google I find things about the best special services but that clearly doesn't mean it's a healthy environment
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Every top 25 school is going to have some pressure. But there's a difference between what is internally driven and what is externally driven. Most of those kids expect a lot of themselves and that has its own dynamic.
But some schools really seem to ramp the stress up. I'm thinking Carnegie Mellon. I'm thinking Cornell engineering.
Some schools are difficult and stressful for everyone. MIT. CalTech.
Some schools are an easy glide. Harvard. Brown.
Some schools are walking on egg shells all the time kind of schools. Stanford. Berkeley.
And some schools are difficult and challenging but work on creating a healthy environment. Rice, Yale, and Notre Dame come to mind with their residential colleges.
The most balanced schools seem to be the three above - Rice, Yale, Notre Dame - and Princeton, Duke, Northwestern, and Vanderbilt.
The pressure is there. No avoiding that.
There's no slacker school. But there's a difference with how each school manages things.
Thank you!
Can you clarify? Are you saying this is an ideal environment?
Anonymous wrote:Every top 25 school is going to have some pressure. But there's a difference between what is internally driven and what is externally driven. Most of those kids expect a lot of themselves and that has its own dynamic.
But some schools really seem to ramp the stress up. I'm thinking Carnegie Mellon. I'm thinking Cornell engineering.
Some schools are difficult and stressful for everyone. MIT. CalTech.
Some schools are an easy glide. Harvard. Brown.
Some schools are walking on egg shells all the time kind of schools. Stanford. Berkeley.
And some schools are difficult and challenging but work on creating a healthy environment. Rice, Yale, and Notre Dame come to mind with their residential colleges.
The most balanced schools seem to be the three above - Rice, Yale, Notre Dame - and Princeton, Duke, Northwestern, and Vanderbilt.
The pressure is there. No avoiding that.
There's no slacker school. But there's a difference with how each school manages things.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:yes, I am concerned about prestige, but we also want a school that is nice, friendly.
Do they exist? When I Google I find things about the best special services but that clearly doesn't mean it's a healthy environment
Brown, Amherst and Rice.
Anonymous wrote:yes, I am concerned about prestige, but we also want a school that is nice, friendly.
Do they exist? When I Google I find things about the best special services but that clearly doesn't mean it's a healthy environment
Anonymous wrote:Every top 25 school is going to have some pressure. But there's a difference between what is internally driven and what is externally driven. Most of those kids expect a lot of themselves and that has its own dynamic.
But some schools really seem to ramp the stress up. I'm thinking Carnegie Mellon. I'm thinking Cornell engineering.
Some schools are difficult and stressful for everyone. MIT. CalTech.
Some schools are an easy glide. Harvard. Brown.
Some schools are walking on egg shells all the time kind of schools. Stanford. Berkeley.
And some schools are difficult and challenging but work on creating a healthy environment. Rice, Yale, and Notre Dame come to mind with their residential colleges.
The most balanced schools seem to be the three above - Rice, Yale, Notre Dame - and Princeton, Duke, Northwestern, and Vanderbilt.
The pressure is there. No avoiding that.
There's no slacker school. But there's a difference with how each school manages things.
Good point!Anonymous wrote:If your kid jumps through all the high school hoops required to get into a Top 25 university, college is almost certainly going to be a much lower intensity environment than high school, regardless of where they go
Anonymous wrote:yes, I am concerned about prestige, but we also want a school that is nice, friendly.
Do they exist? When I Google I find things about the best special services but that clearly doesn't mean it's a healthy environment
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If your kid is laid back, they will be laid back anywhere. If your kid is high stress, they will be high stress anywhere. It's not the college, it's the kid
This 100%
This is true to a certain extent. And, my kid self-reports and appears to be more relaxed in relaxed environments. NOT party environments. So maybe not Uva, although thank you for the poster who had that list!!
How do you find out what the laid back schools are outside DCUM?
Anonymous wrote:Every top 25 school is going to have some pressure. But there's a difference between what is internally driven and what is externally driven. Most of those kids expect a lot of themselves and that has its own dynamic.
But some schools really seem to ramp the stress up. I'm thinking Carnegie Mellon. I'm thinking Cornell engineering.
Some schools are difficult and stressful for everyone. MIT. CalTech.
Some schools are an easy glide. Harvard. Brown.
Some schools are walking on egg shells all the time kind of schools. Stanford. Berkeley.
And some schools are difficult and challenging but work on creating a healthy environment. Rice, Yale, and Notre Dame come to mind with their residential colleges.
The most balanced schools seem to be the three above - Rice, Yale, Notre Dame - and Princeton, Duke, Northwestern, and Vanderbilt.
The pressure is there. No avoiding that.
There's no slacker school. But there's a difference with how each school manages things.