Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I’m from nyc and went to school in Boston. I did think Boston was boring but I got used to it. I went to both college and grad school in Boston and met amazing people so it wasn’t all that bad. I did think the city itself was a step down from nyc. I probably would not have lasted if I went to some school in the middle of nowhere.
Me again. I do think I missed out on some friendships because I thought I was too cool or they were too naive and sheltered. My kids will be those types of sheltered naive kids.
Anonymous wrote:I’m from nyc and went to school in Boston. I did think Boston was boring but I got used to it. I went to both college and grad school in Boston and met amazing people so it wasn’t all that bad. I did think the city itself was a step down from nyc. I probably would not have lasted if I went to some school in the middle of nowhere.
Anonymous wrote:As you can see from the Bethesda and Alington data, kids these days prefer city/urban setting schools.
Especially Northern VA and Southern MD kids who have lived all their lives in suburban areas.
Rising schools like NYU and Northeastern are benefitting from it.
All my kids wanted to get out of VA, and preferred a more urban setting.
I also encouraged them to explore other parts of the country.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It’s weird that city kids can’t handle a rural area. Seems inflexible and even unimaginative.
Before everyone slams me, I’ll say my kid is probably one of those. They want an urban school. It can be smaller than the DMV yet city is still preferred.
I lived in a rural area post-college and didn’t like it yet I’m glad I had the experience, because it made me more well rounded.
I grew up on Long Island and went to a rural school in upstate NY. I nearly killed myself. The only thing the town had was a movie theatre. People's ideas of having fun were either drinking until they puked, cow-tipping, or drinking and THEN cow tipping. I used to watch the 18-wheelers drive through on their way to Canada and fantasize about hitchhiking with them, just to get out of there. I lasted one semester. I was the only Jewish person on my dorm floor, and the only person who didn't drink. I was miserable.
You should have transferred. You're the consumer of the college " product."
Anonymous wrote:Rather than fun activities, this comment is about academics - I went to a large state U, out of state. It was humbling. I had gone to a W school. Kids from no-where town would kick-my-@ss in a subject. What mattered was: most were paying their own way. They were studying their butts off. If they did poorly in a class, to repeat it, it was money coming out of their own pocket. Not the parents.
Anonymous wrote:My kids are used to a tremendous amount of freedom and things to do in DC: friends at about 15 different high schools, major league sporting events, restaurants, concerts, parties, etc.
They have been wandering the city on Metro, bus, Lime scooter and Uber since age 12 (some of these) and age 15 (the rest). They're overly familiar with sex, drugs and crime (for better or worse).
Lest, anyone jump on me: NO, I'm not saying they're cool urban kids or super sophisticated or anything like that. Only that they have had a lot more freedom and stimulation (good and bad)
than I EVER had prior to college and even in college.
Do you think these kids are more apt to struggle in liberal arts colleges, rural settings, etc?
I see a number of posts about kids who are unhappy, bored, lonely, etc. at school. My oldest is a junior and had zero idea what he wants. Should I be steering him to a large, urban schools?
I went to a small liberal arts college but I came from small town America.