Anonymous wrote:Question to OP - but please explain why you need to do anything other than just "move on"?
You both went in excited about the idea of Brown but found that the reality didn't resonate. That's ok and that's why you visit places. Just move on and keep visiting other potential schools.
There are plenty of schools to love of equal or better caliber and competitiveness than Brown.
Anonymous wrote:I went to Brown 20 years ago. Sure, it's not the prettiest campus but that's only when compared to Yale or Princeton's quads. I still found it a pretty campus and it's surrounded by a gorgeous historic district. I liked the college hill vibe, close to an urban center but removed enough to be its own place. I visited last summer for the day and found it quite lovely, more lovely than I'd remembered.
I can imagine standards have changed and people expect more from dorms and facilities compared to the past. The whole idea of roughing it slightly when at college seems to have gone out the window. Bit of a shame. Why do you need fancy dorms to study? A basic room does the job fine enough. College is more the people than the buildings.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This is such a weird thread
Whenever we visited a campus, I considered a strong negative reaction a great outcome - one less place on the list, easier to focus on places my kids liked. But I never considered starting threads to talk about places they weren't interested in
For the record, one of my kids went to Brown and had a great experience. The dorms and food are pretty bad but the educational and social experience was phenomenal. And yes there are majors, called concentrations. Because of the open curriculum, it was easy for me kid to double concentrate, because their schedule wasn't filled with required courses.
It's no different than any other thread in which someone is excited at their ability to say negative things about a school with competitive admissions. It's the bread and butter of this forum, but it just hits you harder because OP is talking about your kid's school.
Read DCUM long enough and you'll find people who denigrate, among other things, your school, your kids' schools, your neighborhood, the style of your house, the number of kids you have, the car you drive, the vacations you take, the food you eat, and the politicians you support. At some point you'll decide the best defense is a good offense, and you'll be off to the races saying negative things about some other school the next time you have a chance.
Anonymous wrote:This is such a weird thread
Whenever we visited a campus, I considered a strong negative reaction a great outcome - one less place on the list, easier to focus on places my kids liked. But I never considered starting threads to talk about places they weren't interested in
For the record, one of my kids went to Brown and had a great experience. The dorms and food are pretty bad but the educational and social experience was phenomenal. And yes there are majors, called concentrations. Because of the open curriculum, it was easy for me kid to double concentrate, because their schedule wasn't filled with required courses.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Did you go into any academic buildings? Some of the are very nice. Brown does a good job of preserving the architecture on the outside, while completely renovating to modern on the inside. The engineering center is a good example.
OP here. We were not allowed to---I really think my junior is influenced by whether he gets to see the inside or not. I'll ask him to check out virtual tours.
What do you mean, you "were not allowed to?"
You went on a tour and they didn't take you inside anywhere?
You tried to walk into open buildings and someone stopped you?
We visited Brown last spring. There were 4-5 tour guides with 15-20 people per group all leaving from the same place. Whether because of space considerations of covid precautions, they didn't take us into buildings.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Did you go into any academic buildings? Some of the are very nice. Brown does a good job of preserving the architecture on the outside, while completely renovating to modern on the inside. The engineering center is a good example.
OP here. We were not allowed to---I really think my junior is influenced by whether he gets to see the inside or not. I'll ask him to check out virtual tours.
What do you mean, you "were not allowed to?"
You went on a tour and they didn't take you inside anywhere?
You tried to walk into open buildings and someone stopped you?
Anonymous wrote:Question to OP - but please explain why you need to do anything other than just "move on"?
You both went in excited about the idea of Brown but found that the reality didn't resonate. That's ok and that's why you visit places. Just move on and keep visiting other potential schools.
There are plenty of schools to love of equal or better caliber and competitiveness than Brown.
Anonymous wrote:Actually they are building several new dorms and they look to be very nice. Fund manager, Will Danoff, donated the funds. Administration has gotten the message from students and alums that the residential living areas need serious upgrading. It sounds like you did not see the part of the campus with the two new dorms opening Fall 2023 or the health/wellness dorm (Sternlicht Commons) that just opened (it’s beautiful). It’s likely another 4 - 5 dorms will be built in the next 5 years.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Did you go into any academic buildings? Some of the are very nice. Brown does a good job of preserving the architecture on the outside, while completely renovating to modern on the inside. The engineering center is a good example.
OP here. We were not allowed to---I really think my junior is influenced by whether he gets to see the inside or not. I'll ask him to check out virtual tours.
Anonymous wrote:Did you go into any academic buildings? Some of the are very nice. Brown does a good job of preserving the architecture on the outside, while completely renovating to modern on the inside. The engineering center is a good example.