Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:DC is considering UT Austin for engineering - but likely wont get an admit there.
However, Texas A&M seems to be a great choice too.. I have heard good things about their Engineering and Business Program - and also the Bush School of Govt and Public Policy.
Any first hand experience as a OOS at Texas A&M?
You should visit. It's a great school for engineering. But Texas A&M is a certain kind of Texas - pretty conservative, very clean cut, very traditional gender roles, very patriotic, very protestant Christian, very into football. It can be a little cultish. It's not for everyone. But a lot of people do really like it. It has a great professional network too. But Texas A&M is very much a love it or hate it school.
You people need to stop using these things as a pejorative and calling it "cultish"... this is why main-stream Americans outside of your bubble dislike you, you're completely insufferable.
+100
As someone who called it cultish above, from Texas and also I am VERY CONSERVATIVE. I wasn't 'using cultish as a derogatory thing. You've got 100,000 people in the stands singing convoluted cheers, swaying, greeting each other and saying "Howdy", following tons of traditions. Call it cultish, call it "clique-ish". Call it "lots of inside jokes which they use to establish a huge sense of pride in school and camaraderie."
Maybe you need to chill.
+2 I grew up in Texas and both of my best friends went to A&M. It is cultish, deliberately so. Kids walk around dressed in pseudo military outfits and salute each other based on rank at every corner. Students line up to attend Midnight Yell in the middle of the night before every home game. You're not allowed to sit down during football games. People on a DC board who don't know anything about the school but want to be oppressed are just glomming onto the word conservative to make themselves a victim of a comment they don't understand.
It's not cultish because it's conservative. It's both cultish and conservative.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:DC is considering UT Austin for engineering - but likely wont get an admit there.
However, Texas A&M seems to be a great choice too.. I have heard good things about their Engineering and Business Program - and also the Bush School of Govt and Public Policy.
Any first hand experience as a OOS at Texas A&M?
You should visit. It's a great school for engineering. But Texas A&M is a certain kind of Texas - pretty conservative, very clean cut, very traditional gender roles, very patriotic, very protestant Christian, very into football. It can be a little cultish. It's not for everyone. But a lot of people do really like it. It has a great professional network too. But Texas A&M is very much a love it or hate it school.
You people need to stop using these things as a pejorative and calling it "cultish"... this is why main-stream Americans outside of your bubble dislike you, you're completely insufferable.
+100
As someone who called it cultish above, from Texas and also I am VERY CONSERVATIVE. I wasn't 'using cultish as a derogatory thing. You've got 100,000 people in the stands singing convoluted cheers, swaying, greeting each other and saying "Howdy", following tons of traditions. Call it cultish, call it "clique-ish". Call it "lots of inside jokes which they use to establish a huge sense of pride in school and camaraderie."
Maybe you need to chill.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:DC is considering UT Austin for engineering - but likely wont get an admit there.
However, Texas A&M seems to be a great choice too.. I have heard good things about their Engineering and Business Program - and also the Bush School of Govt and Public Policy.
Any first hand experience as a OOS at Texas A&M?
You should visit. It's a great school for engineering. But Texas A&M is a certain kind of Texas - pretty conservative, very clean cut, very traditional gender roles, very patriotic, very protestant Christian, very into football. It can be a little cultish. It's not for everyone. But a lot of people do really like it. It has a great professional network too. But Texas A&M is very much a love it or hate it school.
You people need to stop using these things as a pejorative and calling it "cultish"... this is why main-stream Americans outside of your bubble dislike you, you're completely insufferable.
+100
As someone who called it cultish above, from Texas and also I am VERY CONSERVATIVE. I wasn't 'using cultish as a derogatory thing. You've got 100,000 people in the stands singing convoluted cheers, swaying, greeting each other and saying "Howdy", following tons of traditions. Call it cultish, call it "clique-ish". Call it "lots of inside jokes which they use to establish a huge sense of pride in school and camaraderie."
Maybe you need to chill.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:DC is considering UT Austin for engineering - but likely wont get an admit there.
However, Texas A&M seems to be a great choice too.. I have heard good things about their Engineering and Business Program - and also the Bush School of Govt and Public Policy.
Any first hand experience as a OOS at Texas A&M?
You should visit. It's a great school for engineering. But Texas A&M is a certain kind of Texas - pretty conservative, very clean cut, very traditional gender roles, very patriotic, very protestant Christian, very into football. It can be a little cultish. It's not for everyone. But a lot of people do really like it. It has a great professional network too. But Texas A&M is very much a love it or hate it school.
You people need to stop using these things as a pejorative and calling it "cultish"... this is why main-stream Americans outside of your bubble dislike you, you're completely insufferable.
+100
Anonymous wrote:Op here: thanks all. Conservative/Traditional sounds good to me. Hopefully DC likes it.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:DC is considering UT Austin for engineering - but likely wont get an admit there.
However, Texas A&M seems to be a great choice too.. I have heard good things about their Engineering and Business Program - and also the Bush School of Govt and Public Policy.
Any first hand experience as a OOS at Texas A&M?
You should visit. It's a great school for engineering. But Texas A&M is a certain kind of Texas - pretty conservative, very clean cut, very traditional gender roles, very patriotic, very protestant Christian, very into football. It can be a little cultish. It's not for everyone. But a lot of people do really like it. It has a great professional network too. But Texas A&M is very much a love it or hate it school.
Anonymous wrote:Op here: thanks all. Conservative/Traditional sounds good to me. Hopefully DC likes it.
Anonymous wrote:DC is considering UT Austin for engineering - but likely wont get an admit there.
However, Texas A&M seems to be a great choice too.. I have heard good things about their Engineering and Business Program - and also the Bush School of Govt and Public Policy.
Any first hand experience as a OOS at Texas A&M?
Anonymous wrote:It's more Texas that UT, for better or worse depending on your kid's outlook
Anonymous wrote:I'm a Texan and come from a long line of Aggies. A&M is a rock solid school academically and is pretty difficult for admissions, particularly for Engineering and Business. I have a number of friends whose kids are there now and they are top students academically. I believe the OOS student population is less than 10%, so it's heavily Texan. I agree that's it's culty school, but students get the big school experience and they do a lot around traditions and community building.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:DC is considering UT Austin for engineering - but likely wont get an admit there.
However, Texas A&M seems to be a great choice too.. I have heard good things about their Engineering and Business Program - and also the Bush School of Govt and Public Policy.
Any first hand experience as a OOS at Texas A&M?
You should visit. It's a great school for engineering. But Texas A&M is a certain kind of Texas - pretty conservative, very clean cut, very traditional gender roles, very patriotic, very protestant Christian, very into football. It can be a little cultish. It's not for everyone. But a lot of people do really like it. It has a great professional network too. But Texas A&M is very much a love it or hate it school.