Anonymous wrote:All the Ivies are older schools. The WASP aesthetic for a long time was ok with shabbiness. This no longer sells well in the modern environment where college costs $90K per year.
Despite the wealth and reputation of these schools, it is quite expensive to build new buildings.
I went to school at a top MBA school that replaced its building after I graduated. The old building had a 1950s high school vibe but in retrospect I liked it better than the new one. The new one is fancy, grandiose, and sterile. It also has expensive and ridiculous corporate art sculptures scattered about. It's strength is probably better wifi and more breakout rooms. For $100M or so.
Anonymous wrote:Why are you wasting time touring Ivy schools? Visit safety schools instead to a make sure your kid has some options they like and can get into
â Mom of 2023 grad with 4.9 W GPA and 36 ACT that did not get into any Ivy.
Anonymous wrote:Why are you wasting time touring Ivy schools? Visit safety schools instead to a make sure your kid has some options they like and can get into
â Mom of 2023 grad with 4.9 W GPA and 36 ACT that did not get into any Ivy.
Anonymous wrote:Yale was not it for DC. Was an early action pick initially and dc even stayed in a friends dorm and hung out with his friends for a few days- hated it. One of the friends actually got attacked by a homeless guy there and he said this seemed âcommonâ from the friend groups description. The dorm was really shabby, snuck into a class and found students not very engaged, and just generally found campus architecture boring and ugly. Surprised because this was DCâs favorite college, but theyâve moved onto new choices.
Anonymous wrote:The point on Penn - it's a horrible campus for crime. I lived there one summer and gun shots were a regular occurrence as well as constant cat calling. Absolutely would not want my kid there.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:All the Ivies are older schools. The WASP aesthetic for a long time was ok with shabbiness. This no longer sells well in the modern environment where college costs $90K per year.
Despite the wealth and reputation of these schools, it is quite expensive to build new buildings.
I went to school at a top MBA school that replaced its building after I graduated. The old building had a 1950s high school vibe but in retrospect I liked it better than the new one. The new one is fancy, grandiose, and sterile. It also has expensive and ridiculous corporate art sculptures scattered about. It's strength is probably better wifi and more breakout rooms. For $100M or so.
I'm the Cornell poster. I don't need new buildings (I personally own a 1920s house by choice) but Cornell completely felt like it was falling apart. There were giant weeds everywhere. It truly looked like there was zero ongoing maintenance being done. I know this doesn't matter for academics but I notice these things.
Yes, much prefer old to new and sterile, but also a noticer of weeds, dirty upholstery, and peeling paint. I know they take a beating with the weather, but my eye just sees this stuff. It for sure was a $90k tuition and noticing maintenance too!
DD just graduated. It's such a huge campus..you focused on weeds? I guess find a school with more if a landscaping focus? We lived visiting the arboretum and walking around the gourges watching the sun set on the slope, boat rides on the lake.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:All the Ivies are older schools. The WASP aesthetic for a long time was ok with shabbiness. This no longer sells well in the modern environment where college costs $90K per year.
Despite the wealth and reputation of these schools, it is quite expensive to build new buildings.
I went to school at a top MBA school that replaced its building after I graduated. The old building had a 1950s high school vibe but in retrospect I liked it better than the new one. The new one is fancy, grandiose, and sterile. It also has expensive and ridiculous corporate art sculptures scattered about. It's strength is probably better wifi and more breakout rooms. For $100M or so.
I'm the Cornell poster. I don't need new buildings (I personally own a 1920s house by choice) but Cornell completely felt like it was falling apart. There were giant weeds everywhere. It truly looked like there was zero ongoing maintenance being done. I know this doesn't matter for academics but I notice these things.
Yes, much prefer old to new and sterile, but also a noticer of weeds, dirty upholstery, and peeling paint. I know they take a beating with the weather, but my eye just sees this stuff. It for sure was a $90k tuition and noticing maintenance too!
Anonymous wrote:Why are you wasting time touring Ivy schools? Visit safety schools instead to a make sure your kid has some options they like and can get into
â Mom of 2023 grad with 4.9 W GPA and 36 ACT that did not get into any Ivy.
Anonymous wrote:My only impression of the Princeton tour was that it felt more geared towards a tourist exploring Princeton than an incoming student.
Lots of time explaining the history of Nassau Hall and other buildings but not allowed to go into anything.
Also, the tour stuck to a very small physical area in the heart of campus but didnât see any engineering or other STEM parts.