Anonymous wrote:My daughter just graduated from Arts and Sciences. Enjoyed it. Took a year to adjust to people and weather but eventually found her friend group.
Anonymous wrote:Are all of the classes at Cornell huge?
Anonymous wrote:DS is torn about whether to ED Cornell. He thinks he's a strong candidate for various reasons (attends a NY school that is a bit of a feeder, has ECs that Cornell seems to like, plus the requisite GPA + test scores). But he's a little nervous about the social scene and the reputation for being so fraternity-driven. He's a super social kid but would rather not join a frat. He's generally a nice, inclusive kid who does a lot of community building type stuff at his school. Thoughts?
He'd tempted to try for Dyson but will probably do Arts & Sciences as an econ major since Dyson has a 4% accept rate.
Anonymous wrote:OP, your son sounds so much like mine, who's still a junior.
May I ask what other schools you're looking at that feel more like where he could find his people? What schools has he visited that he has liked? thanks and sorry for the tangent.![]()
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Different poster. My kid is also contemplating a Cornell ED. His high school is also a feeder and he has the grades/test scores and extracurriculars.
He is also apprehensive although he is probably looking for a slightly different crowd (although with some overlap as he is super social and has friends of all types.) He wants to join a fraternity and is very much a "guys guy" if that makes any sense.
Is there a niche for him as well? The kids on the tour this summer definitely read "mostly quirky, intense and super driven." It's so hard to figure this stuff out from afar.
Sounds like you should check out Duke. DS had super nice kids in his frat. No extreme drinking. Was Jewish frat.
I don't think my kid will get into Duke. Cornell is much easier from his school. He also likes Vanderbilt but again admission is harder than Cornell.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:There used to be several fraternities for need types at Cornell. Not sure if they are still there. Ski team was also fun.
What’s that
A gross way of saying kids who can't afford full price tuition?