Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:They take a large number of transfers from community college. This is different from most top 20s.
You must be confusing it with the UC system schools.
No USC does take a good number of transfer students from California community colleges. It’s actually a hard admit so kids will do a year or two of CC depending on how many APs or DE courses they have and transfer in.
It’s far less academically prestigious than the top 6 UCs or the Claremont schools but far more prestigious than Pepperdine, USD, SDSU etc. However it’s more desirable than some of the UCs to the students it attracts.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Thinking about it for DD; only downside is that CA is so far away from DC! DD wants a mid-ish size school with school spirit but not totally absorbed in Greek culture, business/entrepreneurship/math/ or bio, near the beach (!). What is your experience with the school? Not going for an all out party vibe, but she would like to have fun. 4.0, 34 ACT, good ECs, unhooked.
Check out Loyola Marymount. It's actually mid-sized (5-10K undergrads) near Marina Del Rey and Silicon Beach for internships and a very happy campus with new buildings and great dorms. Check out the honors college too and they give merit for top stats.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The "spoiled children" moniker really does seem appropriate - a 500 member ski club in coastal California really does scream "daddy's money".Anonymous wrote:DC loves it there. Not Greek nor are any of the friend group. Plenty of clubs and other activities. As an example ski club has like 500 kids in it. Great connections for internships and jobs. Very smart kids who know how to have fun.
Lol 15 kids in an Airbnb sleeping on sofas and floors after piling people and gear into cars to drive up to big bear and half the crowd is on academic scholarship. But sure conjure up any biased image you want. Bet.
They are renting an Airbnb in a ski area.
They own or rent ski gear.
They bought ski passes.
Yeah they have money.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The "spoiled children" moniker really does seem appropriate - a 500 member ski club in coastal California really does scream "daddy's money".Anonymous wrote:DC loves it there. Not Greek nor are any of the friend group. Plenty of clubs and other activities. As an example ski club has like 500 kids in it. Great connections for internships and jobs. Very smart kids who know how to have fun.
Lol 15 kids in an Airbnb sleeping on sofas and floors after piling people and gear into cars to drive up to big bear and half the crowd is on academic scholarship. But sure conjure up any biased image you want. Bet.
Anonymous wrote:The "spoiled children" moniker really does seem appropriate - a 500 member ski club in coastal California really does scream "daddy's money".Anonymous wrote:DC loves it there. Not Greek nor are any of the friend group. Plenty of clubs and other activities. As an example ski club has like 500 kids in it. Great connections for internships and jobs. Very smart kids who know how to have fun.
The "spoiled children" moniker really does seem appropriate - a 500 member ski club in coastal California really does scream "daddy's money".Anonymous wrote:DC loves it there. Not Greek nor are any of the friend group. Plenty of clubs and other activities. As an example ski club has like 500 kids in it. Great connections for internships and jobs. Very smart kids who know how to have fun.
Anonymous wrote:It's a decent school, hardly a standout. Greek life tends to dominate the social scene. And I wouldn't consider it "midsize" at all; if anything, it feels impersonal and overwhelming.
Academically, it has its strengths, I suppose. I know they're big on entrepreneurship, so that may be a plus. The B-school is mid-dish, though, and they're not exactly known for math/STEM.
And of course, there's the exorbitant tuition and the high COL.
I'd consider more prestigious/respected schools with better reputations that meet such criteria, like Pepperdine, LMU, UCI, UCSB, Cal Poly SLO, obviously UCLA - the UCs are also large-size, but figure one can eventually find where they fit in in such a large pool. You might also think about Miami, W&M, and UF (UNCW's also right by the beach, but obviously doesn't have quite the school spirit/pride of CH).
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:They take a large number of transfers from community college. This is different from most top 20s.
You must be confusing it with the UC system schools.
Anonymous wrote:They take a large number of transfers from community college. This is different from most top 20s.
Anonymous wrote:The business school is good but it’s nowhere near the beach. UCSB and UCSD are.
Anonymous wrote:Thinking about it for DD; only downside is that CA is so far away from DC! DD wants a mid-ish size school with school spirit but not totally absorbed in Greek culture, business/entrepreneurship/math/ or bio, near the beach (!). What is your experience with the school? Not going for an all out party vibe, but she would like to have fun. 4.0, 34 ACT, good ECs, unhooked.