Anonymous wrote:Case Western, VT, and UIUC would be the ones to visit.
Anonymous wrote:DC applied for engineering /aerospace, got accepted in several good universities.
Assuming below are same price tag, which would make sense to visit for admitted events if DC visited one so far ( first in the list) and ready to commit.. We think it makes sense maybe to do at least one or two other visits just to see more than one?
Purdue Honors
UMD
Ohio State
Case western
Uflorida
UVA
VTech
UIUC
Anonymous wrote:UVA has aerospace. I have a kid at UVA Engineering and he knows of students who are graduating in May who have already landed jobs at Blue Origin and NASA.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My son got also accepted at UMD and Purdue. Not sure why anyone would pick Purdue over in-state UMD. Both are great schools bit cost difference is significant. I would be interested to learn the rationale.
Op here, UMD is oos for us. UMd about $2k more than purdue for our situation
Why do people say that UMD is an urban campus? It’s not.
$2k more but hundreds of miles closer and with an urban campus.
Also, not sure about your son's APs, but double check what's Purdue policy. UMD accepts them and many kids graduate 1 semester earlier saving about 14k in tuition, dorm and food costs. Just my 2 cents
Anonymous wrote:Case Western, VT, and UIUC would be the ones to visit.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I think this is the right priority order, and for the right reasons, but there’s also a strong argument not to borrow trouble and just to let him commit to Purdue. It’s the best aero program of this strong group.Anonymous wrote:I would visit Case. I think that the smaller private school experience is substantially different from the big public experience and he should see if he likes it.
I also agree that UIUC is one to visit because it stands out on your list for reputation.
Finally, assuming you are in the DMV, I would visit UMD. It’s a great school and it’s easy to get to. I think that every school you visit has an opportunity to realize “Hey, I didn’t know C mattered to me until I visited a school that had (or didn’t have) it”. So UMD gives you an opportunity to see more and maybe have that moment.
Also does he have other preferences? My kid likes cold weather. He wouldn’t pick solely on that, but if he got into such a great list of schools it might be enough for him to cross UF off. On the other hand, if your kid loves warm weather that would be a reason to visit.
Congrats to your kid on a fantastic list!
Agreed. Purdue has a great Aerospace program.
Anonymous wrote:I think this is the right priority order, and for the right reasons, but there’s also a strong argument not to borrow trouble and just to let him commit to Purdue. It’s the best aero program of this strong group.Anonymous wrote:I would visit Case. I think that the smaller private school experience is substantially different from the big public experience and he should see if he likes it.
I also agree that UIUC is one to visit because it stands out on your list for reputation.
Finally, assuming you are in the DMV, I would visit UMD. It’s a great school and it’s easy to get to. I think that every school you visit has an opportunity to realize “Hey, I didn’t know C mattered to me until I visited a school that had (or didn’t have) it”. So UMD gives you an opportunity to see more and maybe have that moment.
Also does he have other preferences? My kid likes cold weather. He wouldn’t pick solely on that, but if he got into such a great list of schools it might be enough for him to cross UF off. On the other hand, if your kid loves warm weather that would be a reason to visit.
Congrats to your kid on a fantastic list!
Anonymous wrote:GT was also the Olympic village where the athletes stayed at in 1996