Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Columbia, more than most schools, elicits a love-hate feeling in most people. Any student considering it should spend a couple of days on campus before deciding. I don't think there's typically a lot of overlap with students that are going to equally love Columbia, Rice, and Amherst. Columbia is the easiest to toss from consideration just on feel alone. You either really want to spend four years there, or you really don't.
Yes, right now would be a good time to visit Columbia to fully appreciate its welcoming down-home atmosphere.
Or Rice. They caught the bug like everyone else. It all began at Columbia.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Columbia, more than most schools, elicits a love-hate feeling in most people. Any student considering it should spend a couple of days on campus before deciding. I don't think there's typically a lot of overlap with students that are going to equally love Columbia, Rice, and Amherst. Columbia is the easiest to toss from consideration just on feel alone. You either really want to spend four years there, or you really don't.
Yes, right now would be a good time to visit Columbia to fully appreciate its welcoming down-home atmosphere.
Anonymous wrote:Columbia, more than most schools, elicits a love-hate feeling in most people. Any student considering it should spend a couple of days on campus before deciding. I don't think there's typically a lot of overlap with students that are going to equally love Columbia, Rice, and Amherst. Columbia is the easiest to toss from consideration just on feel alone. You either really want to spend four years there, or you really don't.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This is not a close call. I grew up in Houston. Rice is great but doesn't have the international reach of Columbia. Amherst is a wonderful SLAC but Columbia is Ivy. My kid transferred from a top 5ish slac to a top 5 Ivy. Ivy any day, all day. Great outcomes and congrats.
Maybe but Columbia is not a top 5 Ivy.
By what metric is Columbia not a top 5 Ivy? Do tell. Because with an acceptance rate of 3.7 percent, Columbia admitted a lower share of applicants than every Ivy other than Harvard, even Princeton and Yale.
+1. This. Rice isn’t in the same category as Columbia for most people unless you’re a Texan kid who wants to stay close to home. Amherst is more selective than Rice and a completely different vibe than Columbia.
Rice is at the same if not higher level for STEM and policy majors for employers and recruiters. Is it not what matters? And if you go by feel, far more Rice alumni will say "they love Rice" than alumni for Columbia. Perceptions have changed. Esp. after the pandemic when most recruiting has gone online.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This is not a close call. I grew up in Houston. Rice is great but doesn't have the international reach of Columbia. Amherst is a wonderful SLAC but Columbia is Ivy. My kid transferred from a top 5ish slac to a top 5 Ivy. Ivy any day, all day. Great outcomes and congrats.
Maybe but Columbia is not a top 5 Ivy.
By what metric is Columbia not a top 5 Ivy? Do tell. Because with an acceptance rate of 3.7 percent, Columbia admitted a lower share of applicants than every Ivy other than Harvard, even Princeton and Yale.
+1. This. Rice isn’t in the same category as Columbia for most people unless you’re a Texan kid who wants to stay close to home. Amherst is more selective than Rice and a completely different vibe than Columbia.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This is not a close call. I grew up in Houston. Rice is great but doesn't have the international reach of Columbia. Amherst is a wonderful SLAC but Columbia is Ivy. My kid transferred from a top 5ish slac to a top 5 Ivy. Ivy any day, all day. Great outcomes and congrats.
Maybe but Columbia is not a top 5 Ivy.
By what metric is Columbia not a top 5 Ivy? Do tell. Because with an acceptance rate of 3.7 percent, Columbia admitted a lower share of applicants than every Ivy other than Harvard, even Princeton and Yale.
Anonymous wrote:Amherst, Rice, and Columbia are a strange combo. A Columbia student is likely to have more and better options than Rice. It's rarely a Columbia vs Rice. It's more like Columbia vs UPenn vs Brown vs Princeton vs Harvard vs Yale....
Anonymous wrote:All three are outstanding schools. You might want to compare the weather in each location. Some people love Houston's warmth. Personally, I feel close to collapse in that sort of humidity and find it unbearable. It's a small thing but something to consider.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This is not a close call. I grew up in Houston. Rice is great but doesn't have the international reach of Columbia. Amherst is a wonderful SLAC but Columbia is Ivy. My kid transferred from a top 5ish slac to a top 5 Ivy. Ivy any day, all day. Great outcomes and congrats.
Maybe but Columbia is not a top 5 Ivy.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This is not a close call. I grew up in Houston. Rice is great but doesn't have the international reach of Columbia. Amherst is a wonderful SLAC but Columbia is Ivy. My kid transferred from a top 5ish slac to a top 5 Ivy. Ivy any day, all day. Great outcomes and congrats.
Maybe but Columbia is not a top 5 Ivy.
Anonymous wrote:This is not a close call. I grew up in Houston. Rice is great but doesn't have the international reach of Columbia. Amherst is a wonderful SLAC but Columbia is Ivy. My kid transferred from a top 5ish slac to a top 5 Ivy. Ivy any day, all day. Great outcomes and congrats.