Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Exactly if they don’t get in a top 30 why bother. Wake Forest, Boston College Villanova, Tulane are 40-60. Go to UGA, Florida, Wisconsin or IU.
Because the actual education is far better at the private colleges. No one at our private even considers UGA, UGl, or IU.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Exactly if they don’t get in a top 30 why bother. Wake Forest, Boston College Villanova, Tulane are 40-60. Go to UGA, Florida, Wisconsin or IU.
Because the actual education is far better at the private colleges. No one at our private even considers UGA, UGl, or IU.
The median student at those privates wouldn't hack it at honors programs at UF and and UGA. The profs are less involved at those privates too. Easy marks are found at private high schools and easily part with hundreds of thousands for the "prestige" of a private university outside the T35 (really the bare minimum to justify 400k in expenses over four years).
Anonymous wrote:Exactly if they don’t get in a top 30 why bother. Wake Forest, Boston College Villanova, Tulane are 40-60. Go to UGA, Florida, Wisconsin or IU.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Exactly if they don’t get in a top 30 why bother. Wake Forest, Boston College Villanova, Tulane are 40-60. Go to UGA, Florida, Wisconsin or IU.
Because the actual education is far better at the private colleges. No one at our private even considers UGA, UGl, or IU.
The median student at those privates wouldn't hack it at honors programs at UF and and UGA. The profs are less involved at those privates too. Easy marks are found at private high schools and easily part with hundreds of thousands for the "prestige" of a private university outside the T35 (really the bare minimum to justify 400k in expenses over four years).
Right, UF, online U. What a joke!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Exactly if they don’t get in a top 30 why bother. Wake Forest, Boston College Villanova, Tulane are 40-60. Go to UGA, Florida, Wisconsin or IU.
Because the actual education is far better at the private colleges. No one at our private even considers UGA, UGl, or IU.
The median student at those privates wouldn't hack it at honors programs at UF and and UGA. The profs are less involved at those privates too. Easy marks are found at private high schools and easily part with hundreds of thousands for the "prestige" of a private university outside the T35 (really the bare minimum to justify 400k in expenses over four years).
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Exactly if they don’t get in a top 30 why bother. Wake Forest, Boston College Villanova, Tulane are 40-60. Go to UGA, Florida, Wisconsin or IU.
Because the actual education is far better at the private colleges. No one at our private even considers UGA, UGl, or IU.
Anonymous wrote:Exactly if they don’t get in a top 30 why bother. Wake Forest, Boston College Villanova, Tulane are 40-60. Go to UGA, Florida, Wisconsin or IU.
Anonymous wrote:If a family is going to pay $90-100k a year they should seek the school with the best value. Personally we would not pay that money for privates outside the top25-now too many top flagship schools. What do schools like Wake, BC, BU, Villanova and Tulane offer. Some are going to say city location but will that open doors or impress future employers-no.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Obviously poster who says ND is fairly conservative, has no idea about BC ‘s heritage as poor working class Irish-American working class school until the 1980’s. They did a good job elevating those first generation college students but it’s safe to say their offspring are not going to Sidwell. Among top Catholic schools Georgetown is most liberal followed by Holy Cross then ND and BC. Last week when 150 college Presidents signed onto letter supporting Harvard Presidents of Georgetown, Holy Cross, and ND signed on.
Why are you people acting like Sidwell students are beating down ND or BC’s doors? Sidwell is sending about 2 students to BC this year. I’m sure they: 1. Didn’t apply to ND, and 2. BC was the best school that admitted them. The bottom half of Sidwell’s class has to attend college somewhere.
This is correct. The students from Sidwell going to BC, bottom half students, are not getting into ND and need safeties.
Not are they applying to ND. They attend a Quaker school in Washington, DC. Most Sidwell students are not interested in transitioning to a conservative Catholic university in flyover country.
The bottom half of the class is perfectly fine with reputable schools in or near cities (BC, Tulane, Syracuse, etc).
Anonymous wrote:Exactly if they don’t get in a top 30 why bother. Wake Forest, Boston College Villanova, Tulane are 40-60. Go to UGA, Florida, Wisconsin or IU.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Surprised Emory isnt more...
Emory isn’t a great college experience for undergrad. The campus is limited and it’s not as good as Tech or UGA in terms of options relative to price (which for most GA students, the latter two will be free). It’s kind of a no brainer.
Is this projection? Emory ranks #1 for quality of life. What's much more likely is they didn't get into Emory. Considering one has a 7% instate acceptance rate while GT and UGA are 30%+. Emory is niche but very popular.
https://www.princetonreview.com/college-rankings/?rankings=best-quality-life
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Surprised Emory isnt more...
Emory isn’t a great college experience for undergrad. The campus is limited and it’s not as good as Tech or UGA in terms of options relative to price (which for most GA students, the latter two will be free). It’s kind of a no brainer.
For Georgia kids, the free Zell Miller tuition can tip the decision towards UGA and GA Tech. Not only that, but a UGA family tradition or a commitment to a STEM career can also drive the decision. Georgia private school kids who are full pay May sometimes choose an OOS option like Tufts or Wash U if they’re looking for a smaller place with an Emory-esque vibe. Not everyone wants the state flagship, and a place like GA Tech may not be a great fit for some humanities kids. (Georgia parent)