Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Honors college at a state flagship?
This is the answer. Most honors colleges promise smaller classes.
In my dd's experience, they don't deliver. The only benefits she got were housing (which ended up being only with honors and awful) and early scheduling, which didn't matter because the classes were hundreds of kids. And for whoever replied with "and they have recitation" - do you even understand what that means?? It means DOUBLE the class time with a TA. It's bullshit. It's the class time PLUS another class time because it's necessary to bridge the gap with a class with hundreds of kids. DD transferred to a school with small classes, taught by professors. No recitations. It's D1 and has deep traditions, but isn't a big football school (if that's what rah-rah means here).
OP - you need to look at schools that don't use TAs and don't have recitation.
We tripled our tuition payments to get her out of an honors college at a rah-rah school
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Notre Dame
Duke
USC
Stanford
Definitely not Michigan. Talk to current students not moms here. They will tell you how miserable they are in these entry-level class with hundreds of kids taught by TAs.
Duke isn’t that big
The Rah Rah of Duke Bball and tenting and being a Cameron crazy is much more than typical for the smaller 7000 undergrad size
Anonymous wrote:Wake Forest. Smallest power conference school.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Honors college at a state flagship?
This is the answer. Most honors colleges promise smaller classes.
In my dd's experience, they don't deliver. The only benefits she got were housing (which ended up being only with honors and awful) and early scheduling, which didn't matter because the classes were hundreds of kids. And for whoever replied with "and they have recitation" - do you even understand what that means?? It means DOUBLE the class time with a TA. It's bullshit. It's the class time PLUS another class time because it's necessary to bridge the gap with a class with hundreds of kids. DD transferred to a school with small classes, taught by professors. No recitations. It's D1 and has deep traditions, but isn't a big football school (if that's what rah-rah means here).
OP - you need to look at schools that don't use TAs and don't have recitation.
We tripled our tuition payments to get her out of an honors college at a rah-rah school
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Notre Dame
Duke
USC
Stanford
Definitely not Michigan. Talk to current students not moms here. They will tell you how miserable they are in these entry-level class with hundreds of kids taught by TAs.
Duke isn’t that big
Anonymous wrote:Do such beasts exist? Where might they be found?
Anonymous wrote:Notre Dame
Duke
USC
Stanford
Definitely not Michigan. Talk to current students not moms here. They will tell you how miserable they are in these entry-level class with hundreds of kids taught by TAs.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Honors college at a state flagship?
This is the answer. Most honors colleges promise smaller classes.
Anonymous wrote:I don't know of many large rah-rah schools with less than 30-40 students in *every* class, but here are Virginia Tech's numbers:
20-49 students 46.2%
Classes with fewer than 20 students 33.3%
50 or more 20.5%
Pretty good sizes for a large school. The intro classes are generally larger, but not huge. My DC goes there and has also had a very responsive advisor who has met with her both virtually and in person since the summer before she even attended. As a freshman, they mapped out her entire four years and she is right on track to graduate on time.
Anonymous wrote:Honors college at a state flagship?