Anonymous wrote:Brown’s A Day on College Hill was high energy, food truck festival, speed friending, student performances and lots of activities.
They did same high quality at move-in, 6 days dedicated to settling on campus, attending workshops to learn about life on campus, and making friends through planned events and activities before classes began. Not sure if this is typical, oldest, but it was a nice way to start.
Anonymous wrote:Did anyone got to UGA's admitted day? We did a tour and DC has a friend down there. We are considering going to an admitted session (which I every day) and then meeting up with the friend instead of trying to squeeze in another admitted students day on the already booked weekends.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:UVA is great--they bring in the mascot, band, acapella singers and have a number of informative sessions. We learned a lot and it was definitely worth while.
UNC was meh if you already took a tour. They had a brief info session with the mascot, admissions and students answering a few questions, then a tour that had a little more info about dorms than a normal tour, but otherwise was the same. Was surprised it wasn't better.
Thanks!
Can anyone else report on specific schools?
Anonymous wrote:We enjoyed William and Mary's very much. It's not going to give you the day to day feel, but it's a chance to learn more about the school, tour buildings, meet with club representatives, speak with professors in your major, and hopefully get excited about the school. The lunch was nice, and my son met his roommate when we sat at the same table with their family. Finding your student's name on the admission banner was fun and a good photo op.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:W&M is always fun - massive event tbh
And my son was turned off by the vibe (and other things besides) and went elsewhere. This is exactly why Admitted Student Days are valuable: some schools look great on paper, and some campus tours are curated such that details important to your kid are glossed over... but Admitted Student Days is when colleges typically let their hair down, dorms and dining halls are open, and the nitty-gritty gets revealed.
Please attend as many of them as possible.