Anonymous wrote:All three universities would barely scrape by in the T75 range of US universities. Incredibly overrated, unfortunately including even by gullible folks on this forum.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Don't speak loudly with an American accent in Edinburgh and especially Glasgow cities. Even if you had a London accent I would warn this. And avoid the town on Friday & Saturday nights it will be stuffed to the rafters with drunks.
Solid advice.
I disagree. Obviously if you yourself act like a drunk and obnoxious idiot while speaking with your American accent you might be asking for trouble. But when you don’t the locals embrace you.
You have never been to Scotland, obviously.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:DD did full undergrad at Edi. It was the best experience for her. It is an amazing school. Get in touch with Student Services, they will arrange a tour with a guide. Better yet, attend an Open Day, + a US based presentation in D.C. . St.A is too small and remote, Glasgow does not carry an equal academic reputation.
OP here, thank you for this feedback. We recently went to the international college fair, which is how some of these unis came into consideration. Agree with your assessment of the three academically. Will have to see if Edi is a cultural fit when we visit. 🤞 We will definitely reach out to Student Services.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I am in the UK, my daughter is a junior and she will be applying to colleges next year incl Edinburg.
Edinburg is a much more academic and has historically been considered a top, difficult to get in uni. SA has a reputation of the place where old money send their kids to, lots of boarding schools kids (not the top academic ones like Eaton or Winchester, but Marlboro etc - you go there for good networking and connections. However in recent years SA has gone up in rankings and even beats E now in some rankings, so its academic reputation has been rapidly improving. Both places have dreary rainy weather most of the year.
Glasgo is not in the same league with the above two, not even close.
Is there a reason that you're leaving the final letter off Edinburgh and Glasgow?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What's the lure for American students to go to college in Scotland? Honest question.
Hmm--study in English without living in the dumpster fire that is the United States? Not worry about getting shot daily?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:All three universities would barely scrape by in the T75 range of US universities. Incredibly overrated, unfortunately including even by gullible folks on this forum.
There's a big old world out there. You should get out more.
https://www.usnews.com/education/best-global-universities/rankings
Anonymous wrote:DD did full undergrad at Edi. It was the best experience for her. It is an amazing school. Get in touch with Student Services, they will arrange a tour with a guide. Better yet, attend an Open Day, + a US based presentation in D.C. . St.A is too small and remote, Glasgow does not carry an equal academic reputation.
Anonymous wrote:All three universities would barely scrape by in the T75 range of US universities. Incredibly overrated, unfortunately including even by gullible folks on this forum.
Anonymous wrote:What's the lure for American students to go to college in Scotland? Honest question.
Anonymous wrote:All three universities would barely scrape by in the T75 range of US universities. Incredibly overrated, unfortunately including even by gullible folks on this forum.
Anonymous wrote:I am in the UK, my daughter is a junior and she will be applying to colleges next year incl Edinburg.
Edinburg is a much more academic and has historically been considered a top, difficult to get in uni. SA has a reputation of the place where old money send their kids to, lots of boarding schools kids (not the top academic ones like Eaton or Winchester, but Marlboro etc - you go there for good networking and connections. However in recent years SA has gone up in rankings and even beats E now in some rankings, so its academic reputation has been rapidly improving. Both places have dreary rainy weather most of the year.
Glasgo is not in the same league with the above two, not even close.
Anonymous wrote:What's the lure for American students to go to college in Scotland? Honest question.