Anonymous wrote:I live in New England. Kids in Mass think UVM and UConn are better than UMASS and vice-versa. Honestly, UMASS has come a long way since it’s ZOOMASS reputation. Even Maine and UNH have improved a lot. But for the best, I think it’s a tie between UMASS and UVM with UCONN right there. It simply suffers from a crappy location.
Anonymous wrote:I don’t think there is a sizeable difference among any of them in terms of reputation. But, what I like best about UVM are its location in beautiful Burlington, its smaller size, and the fact that so many students are from out of state so you are meeting a broader geographic selection of students.
Anonymous wrote:'Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Per a previous poster, not exactly New England because it’s upstate NY, but apart from the college of arts and sciences, all of the schools at Cornell are actually state schools. They’ve gotten incredibly competitive with low acceptance rates, but technically the arts and science school is the Ivy and the rest are state schools, with in state tuition for NYers.
One post wrong about so many things! Quite an accomplishment.
https://blog.collegevine.com/which-colleges-at-cornell-university-are-state-schools/
Thank-you. I was just about to correct the same.
'Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Per a previous poster, not exactly New England because it’s upstate NY, but apart from the college of arts and sciences, all of the schools at Cornell are actually state schools. They’ve gotten incredibly competitive with low acceptance rates, but technically the arts and science school is the Ivy and the rest are state schools, with in state tuition for NYers.
One post wrong about so many things! Quite an accomplishment.
https://blog.collegevine.com/which-colleges-at-cornell-university-are-state-schools/
Anonymous wrote:Per a previous poster, not exactly New England because it’s upstate NY, but apart from the college of arts and sciences, all of the schools at Cornell are actually state schools. They’ve gotten incredibly competitive with low acceptance rates, but technically the arts and science school is the Ivy and the rest are state schools, with in state tuition for NYers.
Anonymous wrote:I agree with others that best overall shouldn't be the deciding factor. I would look for the strongest programs in the student's area of interest, what campus they like best, and where they might want to live after college (URI may not be the best university, but if you live in RI it's a benefit in employment).
Anonymous wrote:Per a previous poster, not exactly New England because it’s upstate NY, but apart from the college of arts and sciences, all of the schools at Cornell are actually state schools. They’ve gotten incredibly competitive with low acceptance rates, but technically the arts and science school is the Ivy and the rest are state schools, with in state tuition for NYers.
Anonymous wrote:Depends on the kid. Alternative = UVM. Meathead = UMass. Nerd = UConn. None of these schools is dramatically stronger or weaker than the others, but they offer very different vibes/experiences. Different from (and stronger than) any of them and not too far removed = McGill.
Anonymous wrote:LOL DCUM land thinking NY is New England.