Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I have found the process of college visits and applications to be such a joy. Here are my kids thinking about who they are and what they value, and I get to be their sounding board. Plus we always find a great place to have lunch. It’s just all such a gift.
Agree with this entirely. I feel like I'm watching my daughter evolve before my very eyes. And she still wants to spend time with me!
+2 and I learned so much about my kids during the process, especially working on essays with my doesn't-talk son.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I have found the process of college visits and applications to be such a joy. Here are my kids thinking about who they are and what they value, and I get to be their sounding board. Plus we always find a great place to have lunch. It’s just all such a gift.
Agree with this entirely. I feel like I'm watching my daughter evolve before my very eyes. And she still wants to spend time with me!
Anonymous wrote:I have come to see that certain posters tear about a college and troll in different manners when:
1) their kid was rejected
2) they were rejected when they were in HS
3) a kid's nemesis got in
4) their nemesis' kid got in
5) jealousy
It's funny when you read schools in the top 10-20 with 3-5% acceptance rates labeled as 'safety' school. That's a tip off right there that this person has a personal agenda.
Anonymous wrote:I have found the process of college visits and applications to be such a joy. Here are my kids thinking about who they are and what they value, and I get to be their sounding board. Plus we always find a great place to have lunch. It’s just all such a gift.
Anonymous wrote:What are some positive things you have to say about any college or university? Can be anything that is genuinely positive and/or uplifting.
I'll start: I love American University's campus. My DC doesn't go there but I was so thoroughly impressed by how beautiful it was that I still haven't forgotten it years later.
Anonymous wrote:Visited two small schools in Scranton PA - U of Scranton and Marywood. Knew very little about either, but being recruited at both so went for visits. Totally different schools, both Catholic, with very different vibes, but my kid loved both and felt they’d be happy and successful. Marywood seemed very committed to service and kindness, and has a library we keep talking about. U of Scranton was compact, bustling, and the business program (kids area of interest) was impressive.
Anonymous wrote:Visited two small schools in Scranton PA - U of Scranton and Marywood. Knew very little about either, but being recruited at both so went for visits. Totally different schools, both Catholic, with very different vibes, but my kid loved both and felt they’d be happy and successful. Marywood seemed very committed to service and kindness, and has a library we keep talking about. U of Scranton was compact, bustling, and the business program (kids area of interest) was impressive.