Anonymous wrote:Unless someone is going for theater, I would not go to NYU for undergraduate. Just not a true college experience. NYC is too distracting. I am from NYC and know lots of NYU grads. Very good school but in terms of having the best experience, I think NYU for grad school is a great choice. for undergrad, I think a university with more of a community feel is better.
Just my opinion though
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Can one have a true college experience there? What did you like/dislike? Does it have a good reputation?
I know several DC kids who attend now and all were drawn to the school because of the scene -- living the hipster life around Washington Square Park is their idea of a true college experience. Their parents complain a lot about the price tag, not just the tuition but the cost of living in NYC. The school is going through some growing pains -- check out the recent New Yorker profile of the president and his controversial development plans and global ambitions. Like a comparably sized state school, it has a better reputation in some fields than others. A college with a similar setting and vibe -- at half the cost -- is McGill in Montreal.
No. McGill is more like Georgetown. NYU is like GW on steroids.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I know some will hate on this comment but my sisters daughter went there (for a semester) she found it way too liberal, many of the girls were lesbians and a lot of her friends were Jewish so on Friday nights they went home to celebrate the special Jewish dinner they have on Friday nights so she felt really really out of place, then on top of that she didn't like the non campus environment so she was out of there by Christmas and went to a smaller liberal arts school a few hours from home.
" the special Jewish dinner they have on Friday nights"? You really should get out more.
Maybe shes not Jewish. Why should she know?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I know some will hate on this comment but my sisters daughter went there (for a semester) she found it way too liberal, many of the girls were lesbians and a lot of her friends were Jewish so on Friday nights they went home to celebrate the special Jewish dinner they have on Friday nights so she felt really really out of place, then on top of that she didn't like the non campus environment so she was out of there by Christmas and went to a smaller liberal arts school a few hours from home.
" the special Jewish dinner they have on Friday nights"? You really should get out more.
Anonymous wrote:I know some will hate on this comment but my sisters daughter went there (for a semester) she found it way too liberal, many of the girls were lesbians and a lot of her friends were Jewish so on Friday nights they went home to celebrate the special Jewish dinner they have on Friday nights so she felt really really out of place, then on top of that she didn't like the non campus environment so she was out of there by Christmas and went to a smaller liberal arts school a few hours from home.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Can one have a true college experience there? What did you like/dislike? Does it have a good reputation?
I know several DC kids who attend now and all were drawn to the school because of the scene -- living the hipster life around Washington Square Park is their idea of a true college experience. Their parents complain a lot about the price tag, not just the tuition but the cost of living in NYC. The school is going through some growing pains -- check out the recent New Yorker profile of the president and his controversial development plans and global ambitions. Like a comparably sized state school, it has a better reputation in some fields than others. A college with a similar setting and vibe -- at half the cost -- is McGill in Montreal.