Anonymous wrote:My older kid dismissed most schools for random reasons.
A few I remember:
Providence College: I can't be a Friar for life
Boston College: The T is too slow out here.
Haverford: the grass is too tall
Anything in the DC area: too close to home (like we want to visit them!!!!!!)
"Not enough trees": this was a bunch of schools, apparently my kid had a "tree quota".
Anonymous wrote:For my DC it isn’t even necessarily the campus itself that gave the lasting impression. It was the tour guide!
Vanderbilt: fake friendly and she said “funner” — seems dumb
Swarthmore: What is she wearing?! So weird. Ew.
Oberlin: If she mentions one more time she’s gay I’m going to leave the tour. We know, she’s gay.
Wm& Mary: they seem so nice and pretty normal, but kind of boring. Do they really think a cheese club is all that unusual?
Brown: He seems really nice and like he is really talking to us, not just memorizing. But he keeps basically saying he has no fun except laying on the floor of a building which is weird
Vassar: OMG, seriously, what is she wearing?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:For my DC it isn’t even necessarily the campus itself that gave the lasting impression. It was the tour guide!
Vanderbilt: fake friendly and she said “funner” — seems dumb
Swarthmore: What is she wearing?! So weird. Ew.
Oberlin: If she mentions one more time she’s gay I’m going to leave the tour. We know, she’s gay.
Wm& Mary: they seem so nice and pretty normal, but kind of boring. Do they really think a cheese club is all that unusual?
Brown: He seems really nice and like he is really talking to us, not just memorizing. But he keeps basically saying he has no fun except laying on the floor of a building which is weird
Vassar: OMG, seriously, what is she wearing?
And you think your DC’s comments are adorable?
Absolutely not! I think they are terribly superficial. It’s as bad as crossing a place off the list because it rained that day.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Took a tour of JMU with daughter. At very beginning of the tour, the guide shared her pronouns. We walked past a nice big 4 story science building where it seemed every other window had a BLM sign. It was interesting because as we came around the building we looked back on the opposite side and saw no signs. It was if the idea was to virtue signal the visitors on tour that day. And finally, for that real college experience, we had to step over some vommit on the sidewalk. Hard pass.
I’m laughing! We had a similar experience at Gettysburg (not the vomit) but DC was turned off by all the woke stuff and virtue signaling .
You all should just look at Hillsdale and Liberty.
Most kids go to college to broaden their horizons.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:University of Maryland - Turned off by the woke culture that prevails there. WVU the campus had two sections.
What does this mean? I spend time over there and don't know what this means. Are you suggesting that the problem is the inclusion of non-white, non-straight and/or non-male perspectives? Isn't challenging perspective supposed to be a part of the college experience?
Yes. there seems to be a cohort of parents who believe that only straight white males should be at colleges.
That’s reading an awful lot into some brief comments. One could just as readily say there’s now a cohort of universities that tell straight white males they are “oppressors” and make them feel uniquely unwelcome on campus.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:For my DC it isn’t even necessarily the campus itself that gave the lasting impression. It was the tour guide!
Vanderbilt: fake friendly and she said “funner” — seems dumb
Swarthmore: What is she wearing?! So weird. Ew.
Oberlin: If she mentions one more time she’s gay I’m going to leave the tour. We know, she’s gay.
Wm& Mary: they seem so nice and pretty normal, but kind of boring. Do they really think a cheese club is all that unusual?
Brown: He seems really nice and like he is really talking to us, not just memorizing. But he keeps basically saying he has no fun except laying on the floor of a building which is weird
Vassar: OMG, seriously, what is she wearing?
And you think your DC’s comments are adorable?
But the two are often flown together so how would a student discern the difference?Trump flag...who cares. Confederate flag. Just no.
Anonymous wrote:I'm curious, how would you and your DC feel about a campus that has Trump flags in the windows and students wearing MAGA hats?DC was turned off by all the woke stuff and virtue signaling.
Anonymous wrote:For my DC it isn’t even necessarily the campus itself that gave the lasting impression. It was the tour guide!
Vanderbilt: fake friendly and she said “funner” — seems dumb
Swarthmore: What is she wearing?! So weird. Ew.
Oberlin: If she mentions one more time she’s gay I’m going to leave the tour. We know, she’s gay.
Wm& Mary: they seem so nice and pretty normal, but kind of boring. Do they really think a cheese club is all that unusual?
Brown: He seems really nice and like he is really talking to us, not just memorizing. But he keeps basically saying he has no fun except laying on the floor of a building which is weird
Vassar: OMG, seriously, what is she wearing?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:University of Maryland - Turned off by the woke culture that prevails there. WVU the campus had two sections.
What does this mean? I spend time over there and don't know what this means. Are you suggesting that the problem is the inclusion of non-white, non-straight and/or non-male perspectives? Isn't challenging perspective supposed to be a part of the college experience?
Yes. there seems to be a cohort of parents who believe that only straight white males should be at colleges.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:University of Maryland - Turned off by the woke culture that prevails there. WVU the campus had two sections.
What does this mean? I spend time over there and don't know what this means. Are you suggesting that the problem is the inclusion of non-white, non-straight and/or non-male perspectives? Isn't challenging perspective supposed to be a part of the college experience?
Anonymous wrote:University of Maryland - Turned off by the woke culture that prevails there. WVU the campus had two sections.