Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:UNC-Chapel Hill
reason? Look at the front page of your paper
The school is a disgraceful
Watch the faithful circle the wagons
That pretty much describes all of the big time sports schools in the south...
And it's not this way in the North?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:UNC-Chapel Hill
reason? Look at the front page of your paper
The school is a disgraceful
Watch the faithful circle the wagons
That pretty much describes all of the big time sports schools in the south...
Anonymous wrote:UVA - really provincial
Dartmouth - conservative drunken frat boys
Cal Tech - a number of years ago, colleagues who attended grad school there told me that quite a few of their female students had been date raped. I'd want assurances that that had been cleaned up.
Current ambition of child, age 3, is to be truck driver, so this may be moot.
Anonymous wrote:UNC-Chapel Hill
reason? Look at the front page of your paper
The school is a disgraceful
Watch the faithful circle the wagons
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:UVA - really provincial
Dartmouth - conservative drunken frat boys
Cal Tech - a number of years ago, colleagues who attended grad school there told me that quite a few of their female students had been date raped. I'd want assurances that that had been cleaned up.
Current ambition of child, age 3, is to be truck driver, so this may be moot.
Or no one wants to own up that they bumped uglies with a geek!
False reports of rape are very rare. Please don't spread this myth. It's more likely that guys with poor socials skills and entitled attitude rape than "quite a few" women (who are also geeks who attend Caltech) would make it up.
Anonymous wrote:I wouldn't "forbid" my adult daughters from going anywhere, but I would likely refuse to pay for:
- a for-profit university
- a school that is not regionally accredited by one of the nationally recognized accrediting agencies under federal laws
- an extremely religious school that is intolerant of religious diversity or that bases all of student life around a specific religious denomination's rules and dogma. We aren't that religious and I would not be comfortable with my money going to support such an institution. I would also be uncomfortable with my DDs in such an atmosphere, but that's not really my business once they're adults.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I literally knew everyone in my class by sophomore year at my small LAC. I totally understand the interest in a larger school where there is more variety. UVA, Tech, and JMU are BIG schools and even if some think their student bodies look the same, that just isn't possible with their size.Anonymous wrote:^^About going where "everyone looks like you": that's the (almost lone but sometimes insurmountable problem with UVA, VaTech and JMU). There are so many kids at these colleges that the HS kids already know, they're calling the first year "13th grade".
Well then I guess I don't know why they call it 13th grade.
I think it's probably a bit of a defense mechanism to deal with assholes who denigrate their choice or point out how many kids from their HS are going there.
I think it's because they'll know literally hundreds of kids before they get there. Lots of our neighbor's kids have been in school together since Kindergarten and they've played on NoVa-wide sports teams for almost 10 years (so they know lots more kids than just their local schools) and they joke that they're going off to 13th grade together.
Seriously? How often are these kids really going to see each other once at a large college campus? I went to a large VA school along with many others from high school and can count on one hand the number of times we actually ran into one another. There are thousands of other students at these schools.
At least from what our kids have observed recently with the "pick your roommate" method, every kid knows all their roommates when they start. And, the friends hang out with friends -- most of whom knew each other from high school and before. So, it seems my kids' experiences are different from yours 20 years ago.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:UVA - really provincial
Dartmouth - conservative drunken frat boys
Cal Tech - a number of years ago, colleagues who attended grad school there told me that quite a few of their female students had been date raped. I'd want assurances that that had been cleaned up.
Current ambition of child, age 3, is to be truck driver, so this may be moot.
Or no one wants to own up that they bumped uglies with a geek!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I literally knew everyone in my class by sophomore year at my small LAC. I totally understand the interest in a larger school where there is more variety. UVA, Tech, and JMU are BIG schools and even if some think their student bodies look the same, that just isn't possible with their size.Anonymous wrote:^^About going where "everyone looks like you": that's the (almost lone but sometimes insurmountable problem with UVA, VaTech and JMU). There are so many kids at these colleges that the HS kids already know, they're calling the first year "13th grade".
Well then I guess I don't know why they call it 13th grade.
I think it's probably a bit of a defense mechanism to deal with assholes who denigrate their choice or point out how many kids from their HS are going there.
I think it's because they'll know literally hundreds of kids before they get there. Lots of our neighbor's kids have been in school together since Kindergarten and they've played on NoVa-wide sports teams for almost 10 years (so they know lots more kids than just their local schools) and they joke that they're going off to 13th grade together.
Seriously? How often are these kids really going to see each other once at a large college campus? I went to a large VA school along with many others from high school and can count on one hand the number of times we actually ran into one another. There are thousands of other students at these schools.
Anonymous wrote:University of Maryland any campus. Awful.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I literally knew everyone in my class by sophomore year at my small LAC. I totally understand the interest in a larger school where there is more variety. UVA, Tech, and JMU are BIG schools and even if some think their student bodies look the same, that just isn't possible with their size.Anonymous wrote:^^About going where "everyone looks like you": that's the (almost lone but sometimes insurmountable problem with UVA, VaTech and JMU). There are so many kids at these colleges that the HS kids already know, they're calling the first year "13th grade".
Well then I guess I don't know why they call it 13th grade.
I think it's probably a bit of a defense mechanism to deal with assholes who denigrate their choice or point out how many kids from their HS are going there.
I think it's because they'll know literally hundreds of kids before they get there. Lots of our neighbor's kids have been in school together since Kindergarten and they've played on NoVa-wide sports teams for almost 10 years (so they know lots more kids than just their local schools) and they joke that they're going off to 13th grade together.
Anonymous wrote:UDC or GWU - city schools stink...think green space