Anonymous wrote:Columbia diplomas are devalued by all the admits from the general studies college program and the excessive masters programs that will admit virtually anyone. They have ruined the brand.
Anonymous wrote:Columbia diplomas are devalued by all the admits from the general studies college program and the excessive masters programs that will admit virtually anyone. They have ruined the brand.
Anonymous wrote:I went to law school at Penn, so I didn’t have the undergrad experience, but the campus is lovely and University City is vibrant and safe. Drexel is immediately adjacent so lots of students around at all times. Philly is also a fun (and affordable!) place to be a student. If your son is interested in an urban campus, I don’t think there are many places that are better in that respect.
I now live in NYC and don’t have any connection to Columbia, but from what I know I’d pick Penn if you have a choice. Columbia’s location is okay (also safe, I wouldn’t worry about that) but the whole experience seems kind of sad. I wouldn’t mind it for grad school, but there are more fun places to be an undergrad. Penn included.
Anonymous wrote:Penn has the special program where you can get an undergrad and grad degree in engineering in 5 years, forgot what it was called.
I don't think I would spend the money on either school though given how much bad press they have gotten.
Anonymous wrote:Both are good schools.
I would not pay for my DC to attend ColumbiaU, but *only* because the Columbia campus is surrounded by unsafe areas of NYC. Very unlucky if one’s car were to get a flat tire in that part of NYC.
The area around Penn is not ideal from a safety perspective, but it is visibly safer than just outside Columbia. This is partly because Penn is buying up adjacent off-campus land and redeveloping it, which pushes some of the violent crime a few blocks further away.
Anonymous wrote:Both are good schools.
I would not pay for my DC to attend ColumbiaU, but *only* because the Columbia campus is surrounded by unsafe areas of NYC. Very unlucky if one’s car were to get a flat tire in that part of NYC.
The area around Penn is not ideal from a safety perspective, but it is visibly safer than just outside Columbia. This is partly because Penn is buying up adjacent off-campus land and redeveloping it, which pushes some of the violent crime a few blocks further away.
Anonymous wrote:Both are good schools.
I would not pay for my DC to attend ColumbiaU, but *only* because the Columbia campus is surrounded by unsafe areas of NYC. Very unlucky if one’s car were to get a flat tire in that part of NYC.
The area around Penn is not ideal from a safety perspective, but it is visibly safer than just outside Columbia. This is partly because Penn is buying up adjacent off-campus land and redeveloping it, which pushes some of the violent crime a few blocks further away.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Toured both. Personally, didn't like either. Neither did the kid.
Really wanted to like Columbia for the Core. The reality is its not a great campus. Bunch of stressed out Asian kids smoking cigarettes outside of every dorm. Did not seem like a happy campus. Seemed very stressful and miserable.
Penn wasn't much better. Nice campus though. Genuinely liked it. But Wharton, Wharton, Wharton.
And if Wall Street isn't the ambition, not quite sure what the point of Penn is.
Disagree. UPenn > Columbia
Not even close. Columbia is a depressing spot insulated in Morningside Heights.
UPenn is a vibrant community of social people, and much more than Wharton and Wall Street!