Anonymous wrote:Realistic: BC, BU, tufts, Brandeis, maybe do a side trip to see bates/Colby
Anonymous wrote:BC is a liberal arts school. Each if you enter the business school you'll take 14 classes of liberal arts before you touch a business class. BU would be a better choice for stem
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP, I disagree with all of these naysayers.. As long as the point of this trip is to get a sense of what your DC likes and doesn't like (as opposed to letting DS fall in love with any particular school), Boston is a great place to start a college search because of the density of colleges of different sizes/locations. I'd suggest looking at Brandeis and Tufts for mid-size suburban, Northeastern and BU for large urban (both of which give merit) and definitely look at MIT and Harvard because why not? We did these in 3 days last year (my DC did not want to look at any of the Northampton schools though if you have the ability to tack on an extra day, I'd encourage you to go out there or to Burlington to look at UVM or UMass just to see if he likes large public schools).
If you decide to stick with the Boston schools, I agree with the folks that said you don't need a car--Uber out to Brandeis and stick with walking/taking the T.
Good luck.
Because OP cannot pay for MIT or Harvard.
I don't go looking at Lamborghinis and mansions when I need a new car or house. It would be nonsensical.
Anonymous wrote:OP, I disagree with all of these naysayers.. As long as the point of this trip is to get a sense of what your DC likes and doesn't like (as opposed to letting DS fall in love with any particular school), Boston is a great place to start a college search because of the density of colleges of different sizes/locations. I'd suggest looking at Brandeis and Tufts for mid-size suburban, Northeastern and BU for large urban (both of which give merit) and definitely look at MIT and Harvard because why not? We did these in 3 days last year (my DC did not want to look at any of the Northampton schools though if you have the ability to tack on an extra day, I'd encourage you to go out there or to Burlington to look at UVM or UMass just to see if he likes large public schools).
If you decide to stick with the Boston schools, I agree with the folks that said you don't need a car--Uber out to Brandeis and stick with walking/taking the T.
Good luck.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP here. We prefer east coast school, we have been to MD, VA, PA, and NC so far and plan to explore Boston next.
merit aid is nice to have, not a must.
we are more selective about the collages we are willing to pay 80k, not all top 60
Anonymous wrote:OP here. We prefer east coast school, we have been to MD, VA, PA, and NC so far and plan to explore Boston next.
merit aid is nice to have, not a must.