Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:UCLA, UC Santa Barbara or Pomona, maybe.
Somewhere warm and on the West Coast. Beautiful scenery a plus.
I went to a little Ivy SLAC in the mid-Atlantic and then to an Ivy in the Northeast for graduate school. I can't fault the education I received, which was excellent, but as a child who grew up on the East Coast, I think I would have benefitted from a change of scenery and culture.
Is PA MidAtlantic? I would call it Northeast.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:W&M.
Ditto on W & M.
Another vote for W&M. Wasn't instate option for me, so I couldn't attend, but it definitely would have been my top choice back in the day. It was in state for my kids. One went there. Visiting as a parent was a real treat for me!
+1 it was my top choice and I got in but my parents decided it was too expensive. I loved the campus and the history, and we had family in Virginia (we moved away when I was little). I went in-state to Cal Poly SLO and had a great experience (IMO Cal Poly is the perfect central coast college, not UCSB).
Toured W&M with both my kids and still loved it. Unfortunately, it wasn't the right fit for them - one went to VT and another to a LAC. LAC kid did consider it for a while.
Why did you choose Cal Poly over UCs?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:W&M.
Ditto on W & M.
Another vote for W&M. Wasn't instate option for me, so I couldn't attend, but it definitely would have been my top choice back in the day. It was in state for my kids. One went there. Visiting as a parent was a real treat for me!
+1 it was my top choice and I got in but my parents decided it was too expensive. I loved the campus and the history, and we had family in Virginia (we moved away when I was little). I went in-state to Cal Poly SLO and had a great experience (IMO Cal Poly is the perfect central coast college, not UCSB).
Toured W&M with both my kids and still loved it. Unfortunately, it wasn't the right fit for them - one went to VT and another to a LAC. LAC kid did consider it for a while.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:you mean they'd just let me in?
then Yale or Oxford.
Even in your unlimited fantasy, you’d pick four years in Downtown New Haven. Unbelievable.
I’d like four free years in La Jolla please, sign me up for UCSD.
Yeah. it's about who is around the table and I'd be happy in a residential college.
I also dont like San Diego.
I can - and did - move to a nice climate after college. Spend half my time in Ojai now. But for college, I want the academics.
New Haven is actually quite nice now. And we all managed back in the day. Was quite a culture shock for me, but it was good for me too.
I have a theory that more interesting people go to Yale (vs say Princeton) because of New Haven.
My kid is actually at Yale. I wouldnt call it nice, but it's nicer than it was. Whereas Cambridge has lost what used to make it great.
I mean, there's an Apple store, an Urban, J Crew, etc, all right near campus. Those stores don't go into ghettos. Plus all the local places that give it flavor and character - many of them there since my day ---Atticus, Claire's, Ashley's, Yorkside....
You don't think that's nice?
I find that strip of stores fine but not a lot of flavor as you say. But New Haven in general is not great, and there's a shooting or death in or around New Haven Green several times a year.
It sounds like maybe you haven't spent much time there. You need to explore the local places. There is a fantastic food and coffee shop scene. And the pizza, oh the pizza! Branch out! Also have you hiked East Rock?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:W&M.
Ditto on W & M.
Another vote for W&M. Wasn't instate option for me, so I couldn't attend, but it definitely would have been my top choice back in the day. It was in state for my kids. One went there. Visiting as a parent was a real treat for me!
+1 it was my top choice and I got in but my parents decided it was too expensive. I loved the campus and the history, and we had family in Virginia (we moved away when I was little). I went in-state to Cal Poly SLO and had a great experience (IMO Cal Poly is the perfect central coast college, not UCSB).
Toured W&M with both my kids and still loved it. Unfortunately, it wasn't the right fit for them - one went to VT and another to a LAC. LAC kid did consider it for a while.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:W&M.
Ditto on W & M.
Another vote for W&M. Wasn't instate option for me, so I couldn't attend, but it definitely would have been my top choice back in the day. It was in state for my kids. One went there. Visiting as a parent was a real treat for me!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:you mean they'd just let me in?
then Yale or Oxford.
Even in your unlimited fantasy, you’d pick four years in Downtown New Haven. Unbelievable.
I’d like four free years in La Jolla please, sign me up for UCSD.
Yeah. it's about who is around the table and I'd be happy in a residential college.
I also dont like San Diego.
I can - and did - move to a nice climate after college. Spend half my time in Ojai now. But for college, I want the academics.
New Haven is actually quite nice now. And we all managed back in the day. Was quite a culture shock for me, but it was good for me too.
I have a theory that more interesting people go to Yale (vs say Princeton) because of New Haven.
My kid is actually at Yale. I wouldnt call it nice, but it's nicer than it was. Whereas Cambridge has lost what used to make it great.
I mean, there's an Apple store, an Urban, J Crew, etc, all right near campus. Those stores don't go into ghettos. Plus all the local places that give it flavor and character - many of them there since my day ---Atticus, Claire's, Ashley's, Yorkside....
You don't think that's nice?
I find that strip of stores fine but not a lot of flavor as you say. But New Haven in general is not great, and there's a shooting or death in or around New Haven Green several times a year.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:you mean they'd just let me in?
then Yale or Oxford.
Even in your unlimited fantasy, you’d pick four years in Downtown New Haven. Unbelievable.
I’d like four free years in La Jolla please, sign me up for UCSD.
Yeah. it's about who is around the table and I'd be happy in a residential college.
I also dont like San Diego.
I can - and did - move to a nice climate after college. Spend half my time in Ojai now. But for college, I want the academics.
New Haven is actually quite nice now. And we all managed back in the day. Was quite a culture shock for me, but it was good for me too.
I have a theory that more interesting people go to Yale (vs say Princeton) because of New Haven.
My kid is actually at Yale. I wouldnt call it nice, but it's nicer than it was. Whereas Cambridge has lost what used to make it great.
I mean, there's an Apple store, an Urban, J Crew, etc, all right near campus. Those stores don't go into ghettos. Plus all the local places that give it flavor and character - many of them there since my day ---Atticus, Claire's, Ashley's, Yorkside....
You don't think that's nice?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:W&M.
Ditto on W & M.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:you mean they'd just let me in?
then Yale or Oxford.
Even in your unlimited fantasy, you’d pick four years in Downtown New Haven. Unbelievable.
I’d like four free years in La Jolla please, sign me up for UCSD.
Yeah. it's about who is around the table and I'd be happy in a residential college.
I also dont like San Diego.
I can - and did - move to a nice climate after college. Spend half my time in Ojai now. But for college, I want the academics.
New Haven is actually quite nice now. And we all managed back in the day. Was quite a culture shock for me, but it was good for me too.
I have a theory that more interesting people go to Yale (vs say Princeton) because of New Haven.
My kid is actually at Yale. I wouldnt call it nice, but it's nicer than it was. Whereas Cambridge has lost what used to make it great.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:you mean they'd just let me in?
then Yale or Oxford.
Even in your unlimited fantasy, you’d pick four years in Downtown New Haven. Unbelievable.
I’d like four free years in La Jolla please, sign me up for UCSD.
Yeah. it's about who is around the table and I'd be happy in a residential college.
I also dont like San Diego.
I can - and did - move to a nice climate after college. Spend half my time in Ojai now. But for college, I want the academics.
New Haven is actually quite nice now. And we all managed back in the day. Was quite a culture shock for me, but it was good for me too.
I have a theory that more interesting people go to Yale (vs say Princeton) because of New Haven.