Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:A good, albeit slightly weird school.
I don't think the kids are weird. They are the same top of their class go to Flagship U students that go to UVA. Although, probably less impressive, because UNC is not fishing from a NOVA type talent pool. And half of all instate students who apply are admitted (vs 15% OOS).
But, the NC legislature is pushing its super conservative social agenda on the school. And that is not doing UNC any favors.
Sorry, not as good as UVA. Good try, though.
UNC and UVA are virtually indistinguishable.
—the world
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:A good, albeit slightly weird school.
I don't think the kids are weird. They are the same top of their class go to Flagship U students that go to UVA. Although, probably less impressive, because UNC is not fishing from a NOVA type talent pool. And half of all instate students who apply are admitted (vs 15% OOS).
But, the NC legislature is pushing its super conservative social agenda on the school. And that is not doing UNC any favors.
Sorry, not as good as UVA. Good try, though.
UNC and UVA are virtually indistinguishable.
—the world
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:A good, albeit slightly weird school.
I don't think the kids are weird. They are the same top of their class go to Flagship U students that go to UVA. Although, probably less impressive, because UNC is not fishing from a NOVA type talent pool. And half of all instate students who apply are admitted (vs 15% OOS).
But, the NC legislature is pushing its super conservative social agenda on the school. And that is not doing UNC any favors.
Sorry, not as good as UVA. Good try, though.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:A good, albeit slightly weird school.
I don't think the kids are weird. They are the same top of their class go to Flagship U students that go to UVA. Although, probably less impressive, because UNC is not fishing from a NOVA type talent pool. And half of all instate students who apply are admitted (vs 15% OOS).
But, the NC legislature is pushing its super conservative social agenda on the school. And that is not doing UNC any favors.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Alum here with a cousin who is a current student. Here are my cliff notes on the school.
1) nice larger school with diverse student population (both racially and socioeconomically)
2) liberal and accepting environment, not super preppy or stuffy
3) has a Greek system but it isn't overwhelming or very large considering the size of the school (vs for comparison UVA which has a much larger percentage of the students pledging). Hence frat parties are not the center of the social life
4) sports are big, especially football, soccer and basketball and the students like going to the games. It's a big part of he culture, watching or attending games with your friends is very fun. I loved going to the basketball games and we won a championship when I was there. It was so fun. There is a lot of school pride which is nice.
5) beautiful campus and nice town, nice weather, nice people
6) size of the school allows for many opportunities for different areas of studies, study abroad, internships, on campus jobs, clubs, programs, cultural events, etc.
There is a reason James Taylor wrote a song about Chapel Hill....
NP, alum here as well. Graduated almost 20 years ago and this describes my experience as well.
The one concern I would note is that for students used to smaller class sizes, it might be a daunting and fairly steep learning curve to do well in those huge auditorium-style freshman classes. I know I struggled to pay attention and that was before the days of laptops and cell phones in class. I can't imagine trying to learn in that kind of environment today.
Anonymous wrote:What they did with the basketball and football teams should have given a death penalty to their entire athletic department and they should lose their academic accreditation.
UNC is a joke. Another Tailgate State where fat cat boomers exploit functional illiterate athletes like slaves with no regard for the academic reputation of the school or safety of real students.