Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Bottom line: Californianians care about the east coast about as much as east coasters care about California. And we're all better off for it.
Signed,
Former NOVA-dwelling Non-Berkeley UC grad
Lol! So true! Except... Sigh.
Signed,
Current NOVA-dwelling non-Berkeley uc-grad
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:it's tougher to get into S now than H.
Also the author mentions having gone to HS in Socal.
I would venture to believe the attitude was somewhat different in Marin County or Cupertino High.
Harvard stlll accepts 10% fewer students than Stanford and Harvard's yield is 82% this year compared to Stanford's 76%. So tougher to get into Stanford? No. Does Stanford get more apps? Yes, so there is that. U.S. News strikes again.
As for East Coast/West Coast - lots of East Coast kids have never heard of Berkeley. Is that like Cal? Stanford has better name recognition because of sports, not academics. As for all the other UCs - hardly on anybody's radar at all.
My East Coast born and bred kids (2 in college and 1 in HS) and their pals definitely have Cal and UCLA on their radar; also, increasingly know of UCSD.
Anonymous wrote:The California economy may be in a funk compared to its glorious past, but the Ivy League states are a basket case.
Let's see:silicon valley and LA vs New Haven, Providence, Philly, Princeton, Cambridge . . .
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:it's tougher to get into S now than H.
Also the author mentions having gone to HS in Socal.
I would venture to believe the attitude was somewhat different in Marin County or Cupertino High.
Harvard stlll accepts 10% fewer students than Stanford and Harvard's yield is 82% this year compared to Stanford's 76%. So tougher to get into Stanford? No. Does Stanford get more apps? Yes, so there is that. U.S. News strikes again.
As for East Coast/West Coast - lots of East Coast kids have never heard of Berkeley. Is that like Cal? Stanford has better name recognition because of sports, not academics. As for all the other UCs - hardly on anybody's radar at all.
Anonymous wrote:Bottom line: Californianians care about the east coast about as much as east coasters care about California. And we're all better off for it.
Signed,
Former NOVA-dwelling Non-Berkeley UC grad
Anonymous wrote:The California economy may be in a funk compared to its glorious past, but the Ivy League states are a basket case.
Let's see:silicon valley and LA vs New Haven, Providence, Philly, Princeton, Cambridge . . .
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:it's tougher to get into S now than H.
Also the author mentions having gone to HS in Socal.
I would venture to believe the attitude was somewhat different in Marin County or Cupertino High.
Harvard stlll accepts 10% fewer students than Stanford and Harvard's yield is 82% this year compared to Stanford's 76%. So tougher to get into Stanford? No. Does Stanford get more apps? Yes, so there is that. U.S. News strikes again.
As for East Coast/West Coast - lots of East Coast kids have never heard of Berkeley. Is that like Cal? Stanford has better name recognition because of sports, not academics. As for all the other UCs - hardly on anybody's radar at all.
Anonymous wrote:it's tougher to get into S now than H.
Also the author mentions having gone to HS in Socal.
I would venture to believe the attitude was somewhat different in Marin County or Cupertino High.
Anonymous wrote:College is usually local, isn't? Look at how Va parents only look at Va colleges' which are mediocre at best.
Anonymous wrote:I have found what you quoted to be true of my CA born friends and relatives. But I also find Californians in general to be very proincial and unaware of the world outside their state.