Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What is the end goal with a biology degree? All schools will have an accepted student day and I would encourage you and her to attend these for her top 3 schools. Very different from a school tour—they will have student and parent panels which are helpful.
PhD - going into research.
All good options.
Look to see which schools have enough biology majors that there is a separate track for pre-meds vs other bio majors. It's miserable to be in class after class with pre-meds who only care about grades and not about learning the content. They are super competitive and not in a good way. You want as few classes with pre-meds as possible.
Also look for a school where your student can start undergrad research as a freshman. Reach out to bio professors now to look for pre-frosh summer opportunities that can continue into the school year. Your child should plan to do research in a lab all four years.
-- Chemistry PhD
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What is the end goal with a biology degree? All schools will have an accepted student day and I would encourage you and her to attend these for her top 3 schools. Very different from a school tour—they will have student and parent panels which are helpful.
PhD - going into research.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Have your DC work out a four year course plan for each school. Sorting through university and major requirements can really shine light on the differences between schools.
Thanks, yes this sounds like solid advice. Might take her a few days to work through all that.
I appreciate all the constructive comments and advice. There are gems to be found on this board.
Anonymous wrote:Have your DC work out a four year course plan for each school. Sorting through university and major requirements can really shine light on the differences between schools.
Anonymous wrote:College Transitions page focuses on undergraduate programs. Here is the page that gives their view on strong undergraduate programs in Biology. There is a link to methodology on the page.
https://www.collegetransitions.com/dataverse/top-colleges-biology

Anonymous wrote:Have your DC work out a four year course plan for each school. Sorting through university and major requirements can really shine light on the differences between schools.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What is the end goal with a biology degree? All schools will have an accepted student day and I would encourage you and her to attend these for her top 3 schools. Very different from a school tour—they will have student and parent panels which are helpful.
PhD - going into research.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If she can deal with the cold weather, I’d do U Rochester. Otherwise Chapel Hill. Good luck!
I concur! U Rochester is a research school, with a huge biomedical presence, so perfect place for an undergrad to do research. Majority of students at UofR go on to grad school, so are headed into research (or medical school)
DP: I'm curious why--UNC Chapel Hill has a higher ranking overall and in biomedical engineering than Rochester and it's warmer. Is there are a reason you prefer Rochester for this over UNC? Is it because Rochester has a smaller undergrad population? (Have a DD interested in bio/med coming up considering both of these for future college apps).
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I feel like people who are saying UNC and UVA are interchangeable haven't been to UNC. UNC because of the size of Chapel Hill and its proximity to other areas is going to feel more like CMU than UVA. UVA is fairly secluded and then Charlottesville is small.
UNC also has a lot of programs with other local universities and medical centers - as does CMU. I think Bio majors have an option to live in a new dorm building at CMU because of the location of most bio classes. UNC is considered a first-year weed out bio program (bc of the strong pre-med interest), so your kid might want to know that.
I am in no way anti-UVA, it is an amazing school, I'm just pointing out differences that I know from having kids at UNC and CMU and having taught a summer at UVA.
I couldn't get either of my kids to apply to Rochester. Didn't like the area or the vibe.
This will apply to any college with a substantial pre-med population, which all these schools have.
Anonymous wrote:is this post just to brag?
Anonymous wrote:I feel like people who are saying UNC and UVA are interchangeable haven't been to UNC. UNC because of the size of Chapel Hill and its proximity to other areas is going to feel more like CMU than UVA. UVA is fairly secluded and then Charlottesville is small.
UNC also has a lot of programs with other local universities and medical centers - as does CMU. I think Bio majors have an option to live in a new dorm building at CMU because of the location of most bio classes. UNC is considered a first-year weed out bio program (bc of the strong pre-med interest), so your kid might want to know that.
I am in no way anti-UVA, it is an amazing school, I'm just pointing out differences that I know from having kids at UNC and CMU and having taught a summer at UVA.
I couldn't get either of my kids to apply to Rochester. Didn't like the area or the vibe.