Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:From Pennsylvania. That’s the main thing. And often from suburban/rural central PA.
Can confirm, the philly suburbs definitely have way more UVA/VT/JMU bumper stickers than penn state. If people stay in-state in philly area, it's all philly schools: temple, villanova, st joe's, etc. Pitt is for the quirky SEPA kid.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I know many very wealthy mainline families who send their kids to Penn State. And if you go to the nice Jersey shore towns, like Avalon and Stone Harbor, you will find Penn State flags everywhere. Whoever said that Philly is not a Penn State town is full of shit.
Not sure if you are referring to me. What I said (or was trying to convey) is that while of course plenty of Philly-area families send kids to Penn State, it is viewed differently in Philly than it is by families in central and western PA. In Philly it is one of sometimes many good options, and is not necessarily more desirable than many Philadelphia-are are schools or, for more affluent families, out of state options.
In central and western PA (where we have tons of friends and family), Penn State is often viewed as THE option. It is frequently the first choice of both kids and families, especially if the parents are Penn State grads. There is just a stronger preference for the school above other options than there is in and around Philly, which has a different culture and different regional affiliations (as you yourself recognize in noting how many Philly families got to the NJ shore, for instance).
Anonymous wrote:Basic
Anonymous wrote:I know many very wealthy mainline families who send their kids to Penn State. And if you go to the nice Jersey shore towns, like Avalon and Stone Harbor, you will find Penn State flags everywhere. Whoever said that Philly is not a Penn State town is full of shit.
Anonymous wrote:This was a school I had no opinion on until we visited. I think it’s really one you need to see to understand. We left pleasantly surprised by how cheerful the kids seemed, how well-kept the campus was and our DS decided to apply.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You'll have every single type on the planet.
My husband studied chemical engineering and worked for a long time in the pharmaceutical industry near Philly (many companies in that area)
Almost all of his brilliant colleagues' equally smart kids go to Penn State. As soon as you leave the DMV (or specifically DCUM) many, many very smart (and successful) people are not obsessed with only attending top 30 schools.
Eh, we used to hire a lot of Penn State grads, and I was always glad when they left.
Lazy, entitled, sloppy work. Many of them struggled with the basic parts of the job.
They talked about the school constantly.
Anonymous wrote:You'll have every single type on the planet.
My husband studied chemical engineering and worked for a long time in the pharmaceutical industry near Philly (many companies in that area)
Almost all of his brilliant colleagues' equally smart kids go to Penn State. As soon as you leave the DMV (or specifically DCUM) many, many very smart (and successful) people are not obsessed with only attending top 30 schools.
Anonymous wrote:There's like 30,000 "kids" there - at the main campus.
All types are there.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I know several Penn Staters as well and I echo what previous posters have said here already - they are good students, good at sports, like to be social and go to football games and party. Overall nice, well-rounded, average people, nothing exceptional.
The only thing that I find exceptional about Penn State is the school spirit which can be a bit nauseating sometimes.
One of the PPs you're agreeing with and I think of Penn State as like a public version of Notre Dame in this respect. Students and alumni have a very "they hate us 'cause they ain't us" attitude and are obsessive about their football team and some quirks of the school that people who didn't attend... just don't care about it. But it can be interpreted as jealousy (I heard a lot of "people are jealous" comments from the Penn State families we know during the Sandusky revelations, and just -- ick). I think people who go to Penn State or have kids there often have blinders on and assume everyone feels they way they do. But most people are indifferent to Penn State. My DH and his entire family are from PA and they don't hate Penn State or anything, but they aren't obsessed with it. They aren't mad that they didn't go.
Bahahahaha, I am sorry the bolded just made me laugh SO HARD!!Jealous of what exactly??? LOL
Yes, there are a number of schools I'd be jealous of....Penn State is definitely not one of them! I agree with some of the previous posters - how they handled the Sandusky scandal was simply disgraceful.
Now, I can add "delusional" to my impression of Penn State people.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:They are the happiest and nicest. Great school. The only thing is that it is easy to not go to class because class size large but if you have a motivated kid it will be best 4 years!
Uum, not very believable. I agree it’s a large student body and it’s difficult to generalize, but I’ve met some pretty douche-y people from Penn State.
Also, the school has a bit of a cultish vibe going on which could be a positive or negative depending on the kid. My kid found it a bit too much.
Definitely visit.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:From Pennsylvania. That’s the main thing. And often from suburban/rural central PA.
Can confirm, the philly suburbs definitely have way more UVA/VT/JMU bumper stickers than penn state. If people stay in-state in philly area, it's all philly schools: temple, villanova, st joe's, etc. Pitt is for the quirky SEPA kid.