Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:DS is an Econ major. He, too, has mixed feelings about the school. The work load is oppressive, the grading hard bordering on unfair, and the club culture is overly competitive. He’s had great teachers and made wonderful friends. He will graduate in 2025 but would probably pick a different school if he could go back in time.
Yikes. This is my exact fear. Do you think it's worse than other T20 schools? (other than Brown - I know Brown is all fun, all the time).
Other than the easy grading(A- is 4.0 for GPA, most classes have half or more getting A- or A, thus half grads have 4.0), Brown is not very social and the obsession with finance and consulting and law is oppressive. The ones who are not like that are ultra political and left leaning/social justice warrior types. It is "eclectic" for sure. Not a fit for many we know.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:DS is an Econ major. He, too, has mixed feelings about the school. The work load is oppressive, the grading hard bordering on unfair, and the club culture is overly competitive. He’s had great teachers and made wonderful friends. He will graduate in 2025 but would probably pick a different school if he could go back in time.
Yikes. This is my exact fear. Do you think it's worse than other T20 schools? (other than Brown - I know Brown is all fun, all the time).
Anonymous wrote:Will a preppy bro find his people? I know there is the economics crowd but anyone else? We visited this summer during their open house and it seemed like 98% of the prospective students were more on the quirky side (not saying there is anything wrong with that).
My son is coming from a super rigorous high school and is used to (and appreciates) a heavy academic workload but he has mainstream interests: sports, pop culture, etc.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:DS is an Econ major. He, too, has mixed feelings about the school. The work load is oppressive, the grading hard bordering on unfair, and the club culture is overly competitive. He’s had great teachers and made wonderful friends. He will graduate in 2025 but would probably pick a different school if he could go back in time.
Yikes. This is my exact fear. Do you think it's worse than other T20 schools? (other than Brown - I know Brown is all fun, all the time).
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My son absolutely loves U Chicago. He made lots of friends and he is very active in fraternity.
You can live 4 years in the campus, but 2 years is mandatory.
Your 3rd year you can live in the fraternity house.
Exam time is very intense. Everyone is at the library. Getting to certain club is extremely competitive.
what are the dining clubs? Private?
I’m not sure what u r referencing. There r no dining clubs. The clubs PP referred to r student organized clubs. Some u apply for or audition for(which also seems to occur in other top schools) and some you just sign up to be a member.
there are definitely private secret societies at UChicago.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My son absolutely loves U Chicago. He made lots of friends and he is very active in fraternity.
You can live 4 years in the campus, but 2 years is mandatory.
Your 3rd year you can live in the fraternity house.
Exam time is very intense. Everyone is at the library. Getting to certain club is extremely competitive.
what are the dining clubs? Private?
I’m not sure what u r referencing. There r no dining clubs. The clubs PP referred to r student organized clubs. Some u apply for or audition for(which also seems to occur in other top schools) and some you just sign up to be a member.
there are definitely private secret societies at UChicago.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My son absolutely loves U Chicago. He made lots of friends and he is very active in fraternity.
You can live 4 years in the campus, but 2 years is mandatory.
Your 3rd year you can live in the fraternity house.
Exam time is very intense. Everyone is at the library. Getting to certain club is extremely competitive.
what are the dining clubs? Private?
I’m not sure what u r referencing. There r no dining clubs. The clubs PP referred to r student organized clubs. Some u apply for or audition for(which also seems to occur in other top schools) and some you just sign up to be a member.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My son absolutely loves U Chicago. He made lots of friends and he is very active in fraternity.
You can live 4 years in the campus, but 2 years is mandatory.
Your 3rd year you can live in the fraternity house.
Exam time is very intense. Everyone is at the library. Getting to certain club is extremely competitive.
what are the dining clubs? Private?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The students I know who attended felt positive about it overall, but indicated they might’ve preferred other schools, particularly ones with more years on campus and more undergrad focus, namely LACs. I’ve always felt one of the biggest reasons to prefer universities is the option to pursue engineering, which few LACs offer. But UChicago doesn’t offer engineering, and unlike other top privates most students leave campus after two years. I’m sure many there are perfectly happy, but more than most universities it seems like a school where a large number of students might be attracted to the name, marketing, and exclusivity.
Thanks, that's interesting. My DS isn't looking to do engineering or any hard science. But the marketing thing is worrisome. Also if kids don't live on campus after 2 years, are they moving to problematic neighborhoods in South Chicago? (I'm from NY, don't know Chicago well at all, have been there all of twice, for work trips where we basically flew in and out).
Anonymous wrote:My son absolutely loves U Chicago. He made lots of friends and he is very active in fraternity.
You can live 4 years in the campus, but 2 years is mandatory.
Your 3rd year you can live in the fraternity house.
Exam time is very intense. Everyone is at the library. Getting to certain club is extremely competitive.
Anonymous wrote:DS is an Econ major. He, too, has mixed feelings about the school. The work load is oppressive, the grading hard bordering on unfair, and the club culture is overly competitive. He’s had great teachers and made wonderful friends. He will graduate in 2025 but would probably pick a different school if he could go back in time.