Anonymous wrote:Ivies or geographically preferable/desirable schools like Georgetown or Northeastern
Anonymous wrote:This is such a bizarre thread. I attended UNC from out of state and didn’t apply to UVA. My kid had no interest in applying to UVA, nor, as far as I know, did any of his friends. It’s a great school, and a good value in state, but it’s not for everyone. The assumption that it should be is just bizarre to me. I certainly wouldn’t expect most kids to have any interest in the tiny LAC my kid attends.
Anonymous wrote:This is such a bizarre thread. I attended UNC from out of state and didn’t apply to UVA. My kid had no interest in applying to UVA, nor, as far as I know, did any of his friends. It’s a great school, and a good value in state, but it’s not for everyone. The assumption that it should be is just bizarre to me. I certainly wouldn’t expect most kids to have any interest in the tiny LAC my kid attends.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I would also make the case for Amherst, Williams, Swarthmore, and Pomona. It is hard to replicate that level of high caliber intensity at most colleges.
Just Amherst and Williams
Swarthmore and Pomona are more selective than Amherst and Williams and both have better STEM programs and access too.
Swarthmore also has an engineering degree, and Pomona has the added benefit of being in a totally different part of the country--both of which are qualities that might be worth paying the extra $$$ for.
Anonymous wrote:This is such a bizarre thread. I attended UNC from out of state and didn’t apply to UVA. My kid had no interest in applying to UVA, nor, as far as I know, did any of his friends. It’s a great school, and a good value in state, but it’s not for everyone. The assumption that it should be is just bizarre to me. I certainly wouldn’t expect most kids to have any interest in the tiny LAC my kid attends.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I would also make the case for Amherst, Williams, Swarthmore, and Pomona. It is hard to replicate that level of high caliber intensity at most colleges.
Just Amherst and Williams
Swarthmore and Pomona are more selective than Amherst and Williams and both have better STEM programs and access too.
Anonymous wrote:Wharton is definitely top-tier, best undergrad business school by a mile. Yale has slipped IMO, their humanities is still good but they aren't as well rounded in STEM as the other top-tier schools.
People on this thread have noted UVA is not good for engineering. If that’s the case and therefore UVA is valued for humanities, and that is Yale’s strength, then a kid focused on humanities should include Yale on the list of schools worth paying for.
Anonymous wrote:This is such a bizarre thread. I attended UNC from out of state and didn’t apply to UVA. My kid had no interest in applying to UVA, nor, as far as I know, did any of his friends. It’s a great school, and a good value in state, but it’s not for everyone. The assumption that it should be is just bizarre to me. I certainly wouldn’t expect most kids to have any interest in the tiny LAC my kid attends.
Anonymous wrote:If your child wants to pursue engineering, UVA is not a great choice. I can think of tons of schools - GA Tech, UIUC, Michigan, Purdue, UT, Wisconsin, northwestern. UVA is not even a top 25 program.
Wharton is definitely top-tier, best undergrad business school by a mile. Yale has slipped IMO, their humanities is still good but they aren't as well rounded in STEM as the other top-tier schools.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I would also make the case for Amherst, Williams, Swarthmore, and Pomona. It is hard to replicate that level of high caliber intensity at most colleges.
Just Amherst and Williams
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Harvard, Stanford, Princeton, MIT, Wharton are no-brainers to me even with extra cost.
You could make a case for Yale, Duke, Caltech, Columbia, Dartmouth
Interesting elevation of Wharton and demotion of Yale from the pantheon. I tend to agree with all of this, minus, perhaps, Columbia.
Anonymous wrote:I would also make the case for Amherst, Williams, Swarthmore, and Pomona. It is hard to replicate that level of high caliber intensity at most colleges.
Anonymous wrote:Harvard, Stanford, Princeton, MIT, Wharton are no-brainers to me even with extra cost.
You could make a case for Yale, Duke, Caltech, Columbia, Dartmouth
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Ivies or geographically preferable/desirable schools like Georgetown or Northeastern
I think you meant Northwestern?