Anonymous wrote:A B level student is great.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:A B level student is great.
Many A level students end up working for B level students!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I am a college counselor, and these schools absolutely do not attract similar students. I was really surprised to read that above. Saint Joe’s is very regional. A lot of kids from the mid-Atlantic who couldn’t quite get into Villanova. It’s in a crappy area of Philadelphia. They are known for their business and autism programs.
Elon is also in a crappy area to be honest, but it’s a different kind of crappy. More remote. The campus itself is very pretty. Very southern. This would be a more traditional college environment.
Yale is in a crappy area of New Haven, Penn is in a crappy area of Philadelphia, Johns Hopkins is in a crappy area of Baltimore, Trinity is in a crappy area of Hartford, and the list goes on and on. Are you telling your students to not go to those schools, too?
well with those--the juice is worth the squeeze
OK yes, but the B students have to go to school too! Can’t speak for Elon but have several family members that have graduated from St. Joe’s and one still there. It’s a great school, growing and offers a lot. Nice kids, good experience. Location and proximity to other NE cities create a large and happy alumni network. Your kid can go, enjoy their community and be a success in whatever field they like. Go visit. It’s a solid choice.
Anonymous wrote:A B level student is great.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My daughter and son both graduated from Elon. Great science programs. Daughter was a bio major (loved the cadaver lab), son was chemistry.
One is a surgeon, one is currently in surgical residency.
This is a made up story.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My daughter and son both graduated from Elon. Great science programs. Daughter was a bio major (loved the cadaver lab), son was chemistry.
One is a surgeon, one is currently in surgical residency.
This is a made up story.
Anonymous wrote:I am a college counselor, and these schools absolutely do not attract similar students. I was really surprised to read that above. Saint Joe’s is very regional. A lot of kids from the mid-Atlantic who couldn’t quite get into Villanova. It’s in a crappy area of Philadelphia. They are known for their business and autism programs.
Elon is also in a crappy area to be honest, but it’s a different kind of crappy. More remote. The campus itself is very pretty. Very southern. This would be a more traditional college environment.
Anonymous wrote:Elon really weights demonstrated interest -- something to consider if your child opts to apply. Make sure you tour, go to a local meet and greet, participate in one of their online ZeeMe events, etc. They are sensitive about being on many people's safety list and prioritize applicants who appear to prioritize them.
Anonymous wrote:“Crappy area” is a weird descriptor of St Joe’s. Makes it sound like it’s in a dangerous area of Philly. It’s actually in a strangely non-central, bordering-suburban area, but some kids would prefer that to a city campus.
Anonymous wrote:My daughter and son both graduated from Elon. Great science programs. Daughter was a bio major (loved the cadaver lab), son was chemistry.
One is a surgeon, one is currently in surgical residency.
in need of smaller class sizes and some accommodations, but at a large enough school to be larger than his large high school and have the 'college' feel, I'm glad to hear both schools have their positives and students have enjoyed and thrived at both. We just want to make sure he finds the right fit and I'm in overthinking mode, so this was helpful. Thank you.