Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:3 years vs 4 years, a little bit more flexibility with course choices in Scotland. English unis are very fast paced, esp the top 5. Yes to classes, hw, tutorials and assignments in Scotland. Final exam is between 50-100% of the grade depending on a course. Read syllabuses for 2 similar courses at LSE and Edi to get a feel for the differences.
I hate to say it but in Edinburgh your child will face a great deal of discrimination (for being American) from the general population who hate the English anyway. Especially on a weekend night when they are drunkenly running through the city streets. In London, its far more of a melting pot and no one will care, either way where you are from.
What a load of nonsense. After two years at Edi, my kid has never been subjected to any discrimination. She has a lot of friends from the UK, and has no intention of transferring to the US.
+1 DH, an American, went to University of Edinburgh and experienced no such discrimination. I would send my kids there in a heartbeat.
There won't be discrimination AT THE UNIVERSITY, but IN THE TOWN. To clarify.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:3 years vs 4 years, a little bit more flexibility with course choices in Scotland. English unis are very fast paced, esp the top 5. Yes to classes, hw, tutorials and assignments in Scotland. Final exam is between 50-100% of the grade depending on a course. Read syllabuses for 2 similar courses at LSE and Edi to get a feel for the differences.
I hate to say it but in Edinburgh your child will face a great deal of discrimination (for being American) from the general population who hate the English anyway. Especially on a weekend night when they are drunkenly running through the city streets. In London, its far more of a melting pot and no one will care, either way where you are from.
What a load of nonsense. After two years at Edi, my kid has never been subjected to any discrimination. She has a lot of friends from the UK, and has no intention of transferring to the US.
+1 DH, an American, went to University of Edinburgh and experienced no such discrimination. I would send my kids there in a heartbeat.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:3 years vs 4 years, a little bit more flexibility with course choices in Scotland. English unis are very fast paced, esp the top 5. Yes to classes, hw, tutorials and assignments in Scotland. Final exam is between 50-100% of the grade depending on a course. Read syllabuses for 2 similar courses at LSE and Edi to get a feel for the differences.
I hate to say it but in Edinburgh your child will face a great deal of discrimination (for being American) from the general population who hate the English anyway. Especially on a weekend night when they are drunkenly running through the city streets. In London, its far more of a melting pot and no one will care, either way where you are from.
What a load of nonsense. After two years at Edi, my kid has never been subjected to any discrimination. She has a lot of friends from the UK, and has no intention of transferring to the US.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:^^ she will be fine, when did you attend PP, about 15 years ago? Things have changed and many efforts are made - gigs, bars, events within the student union and nearby. She will find her people.
When my BF was at UCL his friends were from many different places, Germany, other parts of the UK, the USA. He was from London but he still found his people from all over.
And the experience was pretty "vibrant" as I remember it.
No need to be so defensive. I never said there was no undergrad life. Yes, there are (and always were) things to do and people to meet. It's absolutely "vibrant" but we don't know what that means to OP's kid. I'm just saying that even now, any undergrad experience in England is going to be different from what most -- not all, but most -- American teens think of as undergrad life. That's all.
And we don't know if OP's daughter has ever lived for any time in a city center--whether that's London or NYC or LA or anywhere that huge. I loved it; I knew people who hated it.
I agree with the earlier post that put it like this: There's a difference between going to London (or any large city) for college and going to a college that happens to be in London. That's why the OP's DD should visit if at all possible.
Clearly understanding and being ready for the fundamental difference in the academic structure is still the most important factor, much more so than whatever social life goes on.
Anonymous wrote:^^ she will be fine, when did you attend PP, about 15 years ago? Things have changed and many efforts are made - gigs, bars, events within the student union and nearby. She will find her people.
When my BF was at UCL his friends were from many different places, Germany, other parts of the UK, the USA. He was from London but he still found his people from all over.
And the experience was pretty "vibrant" as I remember it.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:3 years vs 4 years, a little bit more flexibility with course choices in Scotland. English unis are very fast paced, esp the top 5. Yes to classes, hw, tutorials and assignments in Scotland. Final exam is between 50-100% of the grade depending on a course. Read syllabuses for 2 similar courses at LSE and Edi to get a feel for the differences.
I hate to say it but in Edinburgh your child will face a great deal of discrimination (for being American) from the general population who hate the English anyway. Especially on a weekend night when they are drunkenly running through the city streets. In London, its far more of a melting pot and no one will care, either way where you are from.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:3 years vs 4 years, a little bit more flexibility with course choices in Scotland. English unis are very fast paced, esp the top 5. Yes to classes, hw, tutorials and assignments in Scotland. Final exam is between 50-100% of the grade depending on a course. Read syllabuses for 2 similar courses at LSE and Edi to get a feel for the differences.
I hate to say it but in Edinburgh your child will face a great deal of discrimination (for being American) from the general population who hate the English anyway. Especially on a weekend night when they are drunkenly running through the city streets. In London, its far more of a melting pot and no one will care, either way where you are from.
Anonymous wrote:3 years vs 4 years, a little bit more flexibility with course choices in Scotland. English unis are very fast paced, esp the top 5. Yes to classes, hw, tutorials and assignments in Scotland. Final exam is between 50-100% of the grade depending on a course. Read syllabuses for 2 similar courses at LSE and Edi to get a feel for the differences.