Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:La Jolla is strictly geriatric, but UCSD has great access to Little Italy which is where SD nightlife has shifted. UCSB probably is more fun, more spoiled kids actively hostile to learning.
Spoiled kids? Hostile to learning? I don’t know what college you’re thinking of, but it’s not UCSB.
Yes, it's more popular and wealthy now, but still a party school, and mentality. Don't kid yourself.
Anonymous wrote:In Socal, most kids would choose UCSD over UCSB, but the real prize is UCLA.[/quote]
Disagree. and I'm a californian. But it's all irrelevant because OP is trolling. No kids is in such a place right now so just stop wasting time on this thread
Anonymous wrote:When firing, Campus Point right off of UCSB is one of the best rights on the Central Coast. Only problem is when it's firing everyone including the profs. miss class and paddle out so it's insanely crowded. That dreamy wave alone (maybe too many crazy nights in Isla Vista) was enough to make me do 5.5 years there.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:La Jolla is strictly geriatric, but UCSD has great access to Little Italy which is where SD nightlife has shifted. UCSB probably is more fun, more spoiled kids actively hostile to learning.
Spoiled kids? Hostile to learning? I don’t know what college you’re thinking of, but it’s not UCSB.
Yes, it's more popular and wealthy now, but still a party school, and mentality. Don't kid yourself.
A lot of UC kids are spoiled and wealthy— I don’t think it’s specific to UCSB. UCs (all campuses) are also starting to take in more first gen kids. I mean, at any university there will be spoiled kids and also humble ones?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:La Jolla is strictly geriatric, but UCSD has great access to Little Italy which is where SD nightlife has shifted. UCSB probably is more fun, more spoiled kids actively hostile to learning.
Spoiled kids? Hostile to learning? I don’t know what college you’re thinking of, but it’s not UCSB.
Yes, it's more popular and wealthy now, but still a party school, and mentality. Don't kid yourself.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:La Jolla is strictly geriatric, but UCSD has great access to Little Italy which is where SD nightlife has shifted. UCSB probably is more fun, more spoiled kids actively hostile to learning.
Spoiled kids? Hostile to learning? I don’t know what college you’re thinking of, but it’s not UCSB.
Yes, it's more popular and wealthy now, but still a party school, and mentality. Don't kid yourself.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Visited both with older dd, who is a freshman at a private college on the east coast. I’d go to UCSB in a heartbeat, the buildings aren’t anything special but can’t beat living on the beach. I don’t think you get more college town ish than Isla Vista, and SB proper is a free 15 minute bus ride away.
UCSD disappointed us. I think it would be better to live there than tour, La Jolla itself is great. But darn if half the college aren’t built in the most despressing style possible.
100% agree with this.
UCSB is such a beautiful place to go to school. We also say UCSD on the same trip and the contrast was stark. We didn't even finish the tour.
I went on a UCSD campus tour about 10 years ago and it was just depressing. But I did like the Giesel library. Visited UCSB on the same trip and it was a complete 180. Cohesive campus and super vibrant. Colder than I expected though.
Don’t know anything about the academics of either school but they seem to be rated highly on various websites.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:La Jolla is strictly geriatric, but UCSD has great access to Little Italy which is where SD nightlife has shifted. UCSB probably is more fun, more spoiled kids actively hostile to learning.
Spoiled kids? Hostile to learning? I don’t know what college you’re thinking of, but it’s not UCSB.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Visited both with older dd, who is a freshman at a private college on the east coast. I’d go to UCSB in a heartbeat, the buildings aren’t anything special but can’t beat living on the beach. I don’t think you get more college town ish than Isla Vista, and SB proper is a free 15 minute bus ride away.
UCSD disappointed us. I think it would be better to live there than tour, La Jolla itself is great. But darn if half the college aren’t built in the most despressing style possible.
100% agree with this.
UCSB is such a beautiful place to go to school. We also say UCSD on the same trip and the contrast was stark. We didn't even finish the tour.
Anonymous wrote:La Jolla is strictly geriatric, but UCSD has great access to Little Italy which is where SD nightlife has shifted. UCSB probably is more fun, more spoiled kids actively hostile to learning.
Anonymous wrote:Visited both with older dd, who is a freshman at a private college on the east coast. I’d go to UCSB in a heartbeat, the buildings aren’t anything special but can’t beat living on the beach. I don’t think you get more college town ish than Isla Vista, and SB proper is a free 15 minute bus ride away.
UCSD disappointed us. I think it would be better to live there than tour, La Jolla itself is great. But darn if half the college aren’t built in the most despressing style possible.
Anonymous wrote:UCSD has the residential colleges so a student gets a smaller college within a college. For science majors UCSD is excellent for premed and has a lot more research opportunities.