Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Just let her go to the school she wants! You sound awful and Ivy obsessed.
Oh lord, please don't tell me that if your child were qualified for an Ivy you wouldn't explore them applying. We are a proud Big Ten family, hence why I said I understand her interest in those. I think the top ones provide the best of everything! I know very little about any of the Ivy schools and I thought this would be a place to get some useful input on subjective criteria.
My child is qualified for an Ivy and I am not exploring her applying. There are countless numbers of us.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Just let her go to the school she wants! You sound awful and Ivy obsessed.
Oh lord, please don't tell me that if your child were qualified for an Ivy you wouldn't explore them applying. We are a proud Big Ten family, hence why I said I understand her interest in those. I think the top ones provide the best of everything! I know very little about any of the Ivy schools and I thought this would be a place to get some useful input on subjective criteria.
Actually my oldest definitely had Ivy stats and toured Penn, Columbia and Princeton and none of them made his list - in the end he got into Northwestern, Georgetown and full BK at UMD. He decided to take the scholarship. Go Big Ten!
Thanks. She hasn't toured any of the Ivies yet and she isn't sure which one she is interested in touring.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Just let her go to the school she wants! You sound awful and Ivy obsessed.
Oh lord, please don't tell me that if your child were qualified for an Ivy you wouldn't explore them applying. We are a proud Big Ten family, hence why I said I understand her interest in those. I think the top ones provide the best of everything! I know very little about any of the Ivy schools and I thought this would be a place to get some useful input on subjective criteria.
Actually my oldest definitely had Ivy stats and toured Penn, Columbia and Princeton and none of them made his list - in the end he got into Northwestern, Georgetown and full BK at UMD. He decided to take the scholarship. Go Big Ten!
Anonymous wrote:One of my kids was accepted to Ivies but went to Michigan. Had the experience of a national football championship during their time there (ie this past year) and wouldn't trade the combination of academics and school spirit for anything.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Just let her go to the school she wants! You sound awful and Ivy obsessed.
Oh lord, please don't tell me that if your child were qualified for an Ivy you wouldn't explore them applying. We are a proud Big Ten family, hence why I said I understand her interest in those. I think the top ones provide the best of everything! I know very little about any of the Ivy schools and I thought this would be a place to get some useful input on subjective criteria.
Anonymous wrote:Not an Ivy, but Stanford is an academic school with competitive sports and a good campus culture. (Or at least, it was 30 years ago.)
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This is why we were happy to “let” our daughter go to Michigan even though she had an Ivy acceptance. She is so, so happy there.
But you also did exactly what I am asking about. She applied to an Ivy. So you aren't actually different than us.
Anonymous wrote:This is why we were happy to “let” our daughter go to Michigan even though she had an Ivy acceptance. She is so, so happy there.
Anonymous wrote:What major? Something like UF or Georgia Tech might fit the bill for an engineering major. Not “elite” in the sense that your country-club friends will be impressed, but her future employers would be.