Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:For everyone saying you just put on a coat and hat and deal with the cold, that is true BUT what is missing is that warmer weather campuses are a lot more bustling the majority if the school year - kids are outside throwing frisbees and sitting in lawn chairs and clustering in groups talking and sitting outside to read and do HW and so on. Cold weather campuses, especially those that start to get dark at 4:30pm (looking at all those Maine and Mass colleges!) just don’t have the same vibe.
- Went to undergrad in NC and law school in Boston
No, that's a law school experience. Kids are outside on cold weather campuses doing other things. And they're sitting indoors in groups and clusters for all the other things, so that doesn't really make any difference.
-undergrad in CT and law school in Nashville
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My DC's top two choices could not be more different weather wise. Of course, the cold one is a much better school academically (top 25). The warm one isn't nearly as strong (60s), but my kid loves sunshine and warm weather. Thanks to merit, the cost is not that different between the two and they both are a plane ride away. If the academics of the warm one matched the cold one, it would be a no brainer. If you or your kid went to a cold climate (and weren't a cold climate person), how did that work out? Is weather a big enough issue or does academic reputation matter more?
I did promise we could go to the Caribbean for Christmas if they went north. :p.
I am from the south. I was miserable my four years in Ithaca. Made lifelong friends, but that kind of cold weather is just not for me. Every chance I had, I got the hell out of that place to thaw….I’m going to say I regret since it has opened a lot of doors for me over the years, but I could have stayed South at Rice, but decided to go up north…..tough one.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I’m not a cold weather person but did fine at a cold weather school. I think the key is to find one with a small campus and a culture where cold weather clothes are accepted. I was much colder living in NyC after graduation because people there (at least at the time) did not wear parkas and knit hats and snow boots because they were too fashionable. I think a lot of NE or MW schools are totally fine with dreasing like a snowman. So look for a school where LL beam and north face is considered cool and where you won’t have to walk 2 miles to class.
+1 to everything here.
Signed, a Los Angeles native who went to Dartmouth and loved it once I stocked up at the LL.Bean flagship store in Maine.
Anonymous wrote:For everyone saying you just put on a coat and hat and deal with the cold, that is true BUT what is missing is that warmer weather campuses are a lot more bustling the majority if the school year - kids are outside throwing frisbees and sitting in lawn chairs and clustering in groups talking and sitting outside to read and do HW and so on. Cold weather campuses, especially those that start to get dark at 4:30pm (looking at all those Maine and Mass colleges!) just don’t have the same vibe.
- Went to undergrad in NC and law school in Boston
Anonymous wrote:The school in question is not in the NE. It's Michigan.
(As a reference, sunset in MA today is 5:00pm and MI it's 5:55pm. Sunrise is skewed the same way, but like I said, a lot of kids sleep through that time)Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The school in question is not in the NE. It's Michigan.
That's worse!
Anonymous wrote:The school in question is not in the NE. It's Michigan.
Anonymous wrote:It was really really hard and I didn’t understand seasonal depression until I moved away after college. I do not have good memories of college and absolutely told one of my kids to factor this into the decision. Those saying it doesn’t matter are not affected. It’s not the weather it’s the dark and grey of the NE. That’s what did me in.