Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:So kids get tired of Ann Arbor and all Michigan all the time? That’s my fear with Michigan. No escape when you want to see something other than blue and yellow.
You’ve never been to Ann Arbor right?
Anonymous wrote:So kids get tired of Ann Arbor and all Michigan all the time? That’s my fear with Michigan. No escape when you want to see something other than blue and yellow.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This is what we’re thinking as well. Is there any case/area of study would you would consider Northwestern over UofM? While we can pay Northwestern without issue, UofM instate tuition is so much less. I can’t help but to consider the value of the money spent.
Journalism or may PoliSci at Northwestern. Or if he wants to be a a lawyer MAYBE NW. But engineering is Michigan for sure.
Anonymous wrote:This is what we’re thinking as well. Is there any case/area of study would you would consider Northwestern over UofM? While we can pay Northwestern without issue, UofM instate tuition is so much less. I can’t help but to consider the value of the money spent.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This is what we’re thinking as well. Is there any case/area of study would you would consider Northwestern over UofM? While we can pay Northwestern without issue, UofM instate tuition is so much less. I can’t help but to consider the value of the money spent.
It makes zero sense unless your kid has a strong affinity to NU.
The main difference is 8K undergrads vs 20k+ undergrads. So smaller campus, more kids who are actively involved in a variety of majors (very common to double major, or double triple minor in something totally unrelated).
Then again, we let our DC pick between two very similar schools (both with 6K undergrads, similar schools) and our DC chose the full pay $85K+ vs the one with $40K+ merit per year (so only $40-45K/year).
IMO they are very different schools. My kids would struggle at a school with 300+ in many classes and one with that many students.
You’re comparing smallish colleges/universities with a Michigan and Northwestern. Even NU has 50% more undergraduates than the schools you mentioned. Neither school will have a LAC feel.
NU has approximately 8K undergrads. Not 12K (as you stated). It most definately has a much smaller feel than UMich. Never stated it was LAC/2-3K size. But outside of large freshman stem courses (1st year chem and 2nd year Orgo, Phsyics) most courses are less than 50. And 30+ years ago chem was a large lecture (300 with smaller discussions/labs) and physics was 75-100 max. Otherwise every other course was 50 or smaller. No sitting in calculus for 250+ like at UMich.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This is what we’re thinking as well. Is there any case/area of study would you would consider Northwestern over UofM? While we can pay Northwestern without issue, UofM instate tuition is so much less. I can’t help but to consider the value of the money spent.
It makes zero sense unless your kid has a strong affinity to NU.
The main difference is 8K undergrads vs 20k+ undergrads. So smaller campus, more kids who are actively involved in a variety of majors (very common to double major, or double triple minor in something totally unrelated).
Then again, we let our DC pick between two very similar schools (both with 6K undergrads, similar schools) and our DC chose the full pay $85K+ vs the one with $40K+ merit per year (so only $40-45K/year).
IMO they are very different schools. My kids would struggle at a school with 300+ in many classes and one with that many students.
You’re comparing smallish colleges/universities with a Michigan and Northwestern. Even NU has 50% more undergraduates than the schools you mentioned. Neither school will have a LAC feel.
NU has approximately 8K undergrads. Not 12K (as you stated). It most definately has a much smaller feel than UMich. Never stated it was LAC/2-3K size. But outside of large freshman stem courses (1st year chem and 2nd year Orgo, Phsyics) most courses are less than 50. And 30+ years ago chem was a large lecture (300 with smaller discussions/labs) and physics was 75-100 max. Otherwise every other course was 50 or smaller. No sitting in calculus for 250+ like at UMich.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This is what we’re thinking as well. Is there any case/area of study would you would consider Northwestern over UofM? While we can pay Northwestern without issue, UofM instate tuition is so much less. I can’t help but to consider the value of the money spent.
It makes zero sense unless your kid has a strong affinity to NU.
The main difference is 8K undergrads vs 20k+ undergrads. So smaller campus, more kids who are actively involved in a variety of majors (very common to double major, or double triple minor in something totally unrelated).
Then again, we let our DC pick between two very similar schools (both with 6K undergrads, similar schools) and our DC chose the full pay $85K+ vs the one with $40K+ merit per year (so only $40-45K/year).
IMO they are very different schools. My kids would struggle at a school with 300+ in many classes and one with that many students.
You’re comparing smallish colleges/universities with a Michigan and Northwestern. Even NU has 50% more undergraduates than the schools you mentioned. Neither school will have a LAC feel.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This is what we’re thinking as well. Is there any case/area of study would you would consider Northwestern over UofM? While we can pay Northwestern without issue, UofM instate tuition is so much less. I can’t help but to consider the value of the money spent.
It makes zero sense unless your kid has a strong affinity to NU.
The main difference is 8K undergrads vs 20k+ undergrads. So smaller campus, more kids who are actively involved in a variety of majors (very common to double major, or double triple minor in something totally unrelated).
Then again, we let our DC pick between two very similar schools (both with 6K undergrads, similar schools) and our DC chose the full pay $85K+ vs the one with $40K+ merit per year (so only $40-45K/year).
IMO they are very different schools. My kids would struggle at a school with 300+ in many classes and one with that many students.
Anonymous wrote:Northwestern is the better school, IMO. But they are very close and with In-state tuition, Northwestern is not worth the extra $40K+/year.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This is what we’re thinking as well. Is there any case/area of study would you would consider Northwestern over UofM? While we can pay Northwestern without issue, UofM instate tuition is so much less. I can’t help but to consider the value of the money spent.
It makes zero sense unless your kid has a strong affinity to NU.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I would say my kid is going to UMich and the undergrad math education is very tough. Majors have high math requirements and many students try and take math at community colleges to avoid the first two years of math—through linear algebra.
My kid is busy taking Nova CC classes to beef up on math.
If your kid is weak in math I would be careful about UMich.
You think Northwestern will be easier?