Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:savannah college of art and design. programs are niche but if it’s a good fit, your child will have an awesome experience. and savannah is beautiful.
I love Savannah and SCAD seems like a great school, but the kid of person actively concerned about a safe area is not going to think Savannah qualifies
I love Savannah, and I agree.
OP, SCAD is very well regarded and has a very large international student population. I'd tour the campus and housing areas at 10:00 pm, midnight, and 2:00 am and see what you think on several nights. Areas of Savannah can be sketchy.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:savannah college of art and design. programs are niche but if it’s a good fit, your child will have an awesome experience. and savannah is beautiful.
I love Savannah and SCAD seems like a great school, but the kid of person actively concerned about a safe area is not going to think Savannah qualifies
I love Savannah, and I agree.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Ah yes, because all cities are dangerous hotbeds of crime! A rather provincial, close-minded outlook, no?
Quite literally every college, university, art school has campus security, key card-protected doors and receptionists in every building and residence hall, etc. And in urban areas, your child is most certainly within closer proximity to police and emergency responders.
But if your DC shares such a pessimistic view of urban areas and general closemindedness, perhaps they're not ready for art school
I went to the art institute of Chicago. There was no "campus security." We were on our own. I lived in the city, in my own apartment and took the train to school. With your big girl view of life, you should know that living in a city is not always easy or safe, especially for some young women. I was followed home once and almost raped. Thank God my roommates were home.
No need to try to make fun of OP, especially since you seem clueless yourself.
I'm sorry you were nearly raped. Sincerely.
At the same time, there is not a rich suburban high school on the planet that doesn't have MANY students raped each year. The area by SAIC is as safe or safer than any burb. It's downtown Chicago. It's not Garfield Park or Englewood.
Anonymous wrote:SAIC is in downtown Chicago and is as safe as you'll find anywhere. SCAD, SVA, Cal arts, Sheridan in Toronto, MCAD, and many many more safe areas with art schools. Really, only the totally paranoid will worry about this
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Ah yes, because all cities are dangerous hotbeds of crime! A rather provincial, close-minded outlook, no?
Quite literally every college, university, art school has campus security, key card-protected doors and receptionists in every building and residence hall, etc. And in urban areas, your child is most certainly within closer proximity to police and emergency responders.
But if your DC shares such a pessimistic view of urban areas and general closemindedness, perhaps they're not ready for art school
I went to the art institute of Chicago. There was no "campus security." We were on our own. I lived in the city, in my own apartment and took the train to school. With your big girl view of life, you should know that living in a city is not always easy or safe, especially for some young women. I was followed home once and almost raped. Thank God my roommates were home.
No need to try to make fun of OP, especially since you seem clueless yourself.
I'm sorry you were nearly raped. Sincerely.
At the same time, there is not a rich suburban high school on the planet that doesn't have MANY students raped each year. The area by SAIC is as safe or safer than any burb. It's downtown Chicago. It's not Garfield Park or Englewood.
Yes, people here love to make sweeping generalizations without citing any sources. It does make their often histrionic statements unbelievable.
Disagree with your blanket statement about rapes in suburban high schools.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:MICA.
It's an amazing school (I'm an alum). When I went in the 1990s, we used to find bent spoons outside the studio building. No longer the case.
We used to live in Bolton Hill - the neighborhood where MICA is located. We were about 4 blocks from Mt. Royal Ave. where most MICA buildings are located, and the students rented apartments in adjacent townhomes.
I love Baltimore and I loved living in Bolton Hill, but I would never ever describe it as safe. Those kids came and went at all times of the night - I used to worry about them and they were constantly getting mugged.
Our former neighbors say it’s getting worse.
So if safety is critical then I would deprioritize MICA.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Ah yes, because all cities are dangerous hotbeds of crime! A rather provincial, close-minded outlook, no?
Quite literally every college, university, art school has campus security, key card-protected doors and receptionists in every building and residence hall, etc. And in urban areas, your child is most certainly within closer proximity to police and emergency responders.
But if your DC shares such a pessimistic view of urban areas and general closemindedness, perhaps they're not ready for art school
I went to the art institute of Chicago. There was no "campus security." We were on our own. I lived in the city, in my own apartment and took the train to school. With your big girl view of life, you should know that living in a city is not always easy or safe, especially for some young women. I was followed home once and almost raped. Thank God my roommates were home.
No need to try to make fun of OP, especially since you seem clueless yourself.
I'm sorry you were nearly raped. Sincerely.
At the same time, there is not a rich suburban high school on the planet that doesn't have MANY students raped each year. The area by SAIC is as safe or safer than any burb. It's downtown Chicago. It's not Garfield Park or Englewood.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:savannah college of art and design. programs are niche but if it’s a good fit, your child will have an awesome experience. and savannah is beautiful.
I love Savannah and SCAD seems like a great school, but the kid of person actively concerned about a safe area is not going to think Savannah qualifies
Anonymous wrote:Ah yes, because all cities are dangerous hotbeds of crime! A rather provincial, close-minded outlook, no?
Quite literally every college, university, art school has campus security, key card-protected doors and receptionists in every building and residence hall, etc. And in urban areas, your child is most certainly within closer proximity to police and emergency responders.
But if your DC shares such a pessimistic view of urban areas and general closemindedness, perhaps they're not ready for art school
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Ah yes, because all cities are dangerous hotbeds of crime! A rather provincial, close-minded outlook, no?
Quite literally every college, university, art school has campus security, key card-protected doors and receptionists in every building and residence hall, etc. And in urban areas, your child is most certainly within closer proximity to police and emergency responders.
But if your DC shares such a pessimistic view of urban areas and general closemindedness, perhaps they're not ready for art school
I went to the art institute of Chicago. There was no "campus security." We were on our own. I lived in the city, in my own apartment and took the train to school. With your big girl view of life, you should know that living in a city is not always easy or safe, especially for some young women. I was followed home once and almost raped. Thank God my roommates were home.
No need to try to make fun of OP, especially since you seem clueless yourself.
Anonymous wrote:Please recommend reputable art schools (visual arts) in safe areas.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:MICA.
It's an amazing school (I'm an alum). When I went in the 1990s, we used to find bent spoons outside the studio building. No longer the case.
We used to live in Bolton Hill - the neighborhood where MICA is located. We were about 4 blocks from Mt. Royal Ave. where most MICA buildings are located, and the students rented apartments in adjacent townhomes.
I love Baltimore and I loved living in Bolton Hill, but I would never ever describe it as safe. Those kids came and went at all times of the night - I used to worry about them and they were constantly getting mugged.
Our former neighbors say it’s getting worse.
So if safety is critical then I would deprioritize MICA.
Anonymous wrote:Define “safe” to you. Are you using this as discriminatory coded language?