Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I'm a UNC grad from out of state. It is definitely a school with name recognition throughout the US, more so than UVA. I know that it is because of basketball, but people still consider it a great school. I feel like it is like Michigan in that you will see lots of Carolina hats/sweatshirts/etc and it doesn't necessarily mean that people are alum.
I had a great experience at UNC and went on to get a PhD from an ivy with complete funding; a student from Berkeley and I were the only ones in our cohort not from an Ivy or SLAC.
It is definitely not a safety for in-state students. People should realize when they make statements like that they lose all credibility. Stats are readily available.
I am the out-of-state student who transferred out. It definitely is a safety school for many in-state residents. It was very difficult to get in as an out of stater, and it just didn’t have the reputation for being so difficult in state. Not even close. Not sure how you can claim otherwise. It is a beautiful campus, though.
NP. Perhaps it is a safety for the top students in state, definitely not for the majority.
I can’t say I polled a majority of the students there, but I never got the feeling that in-staters felt like they were attending an elite institution. It was just their state school.
Well UVA is the state flagship of Virginia and students there certainly feel like it's an elite institution. But for any state flagship, you are going to have quite a few kids who got in to higher ranked schooos but chose not to attend due to cost.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I'm a UNC grad from out of state. It is definitely a school with name recognition throughout the US, more so than UVA. I know that it is because of basketball, but people still consider it a great school. I feel like it is like Michigan in that you will see lots of Carolina hats/sweatshirts/etc and it doesn't necessarily mean that people are alum.
I had a great experience at UNC and went on to get a PhD from an ivy with complete funding; a student from Berkeley and I were the only ones in our cohort not from an Ivy or SLAC.
It is definitely not a safety for in-state students. People should realize when they make statements like that they lose all credibility. Stats are readily available.
I am the out-of-state student who transferred out. It definitely is a safety school for many in-state residents. It was very difficult to get in as an out of stater, and it just didn’t have the reputation for being so difficult in state. Not even close. Not sure how you can claim otherwise. It is a beautiful campus, though.
NP. Perhaps it is a safety for the top students in state, definitely not for the majority.
I can’t say I polled a majority of the students there, but I never got the feeling that in-staters felt like they were attending an elite institution. It was just their state school.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Another lax bro Greek party school?
No way. My nephew goes there and he is as far from fratty as it gets and he absolutely loves it. He actually thinks it's more hipster than preppy. He chose it over UVA because of the different vibe.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I'm a UNC grad from out of state. It is definitely a school with name recognition throughout the US, more so than UVA. I know that it is because of basketball, but people still consider it a great school. I feel like it is like Michigan in that you will see lots of Carolina hats/sweatshirts/etc and it doesn't necessarily mean that people are alum.
I had a great experience at UNC and went on to get a PhD from an ivy with complete funding; a student from Berkeley and I were the only ones in our cohort not from an Ivy or SLAC.
It is definitely not a safety for in-state students. People should realize when they make statements like that they lose all credibility. Stats are readily available.
I am the out-of-state student who transferred out. It definitely is a safety school for many in-state residents. It was very difficult to get in as an out of stater, and it just didn’t have the reputation for being so difficult in state. Not even close. Not sure how you can claim otherwise. It is a beautiful campus, though.
NP. Perhaps it is a safety for the top students in state, definitely not for the majority.
Anonymous wrote:41 percent in state admission rate.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I'm a UNC grad from out of state. It is definitely a school with name recognition throughout the US, more so than UVA. I know that it is because of basketball, but people still consider it a great school. I feel like it is like Michigan in that you will see lots of Carolina hats/sweatshirts/etc and it doesn't necessarily mean that people are alum.
I had a great experience at UNC and went on to get a PhD from an ivy with complete funding; a student from Berkeley and I were the only ones in our cohort not from an Ivy or SLAC.
It is definitely not a safety for in-state students. People should realize when they make statements like that they lose all credibility. Stats are readily available.
I am the out-of-state student who transferred out. It definitely is a safety school for many in-state residents. It was very difficult to get in as an out of stater, and it just didn’t have the reputation for being so difficult in state. Not even close. Not sure how you can claim otherwise. It is a beautiful campus, though.
Anonymous wrote:I'm a UNC grad from out of state. It is definitely a school with name recognition throughout the US, more so than UVA. I know that it is because of basketball, but people still consider it a great school. I feel like it is like Michigan in that you will see lots of Carolina hats/sweatshirts/etc and it doesn't necessarily mean that people are alum.
I had a great experience at UNC and went on to get a PhD from an ivy with complete funding; a student from Berkeley and I were the only ones in our cohort not from an Ivy or SLAC.
It is definitely not a safety for in-state students. People should realize when they make statements like that they lose all credibility. Stats are readily available.
Anonymous wrote:I lived in Chapel Hill for ten years, but didn't go there (my spouse was faculty there). I went to colleges on the West Coast.
Chapel Hill is a FANTASTIC college town. It has one of the most beautiful campuses in the entire country, it's own research hospital, elite basketball (it's hard not to become a bball fan living there). The town has so many great restaurants and shops. I never did get around to trying them all.
I would leave DC in a hot split second to move back there. Quality of life is awesome, COL affordable. If you're looking out of state, it's a great school. Be warned: your kid might want to stay there and live in Raleigh-Durham-Chapel Hill!
Anonymous wrote:I lived in Chapel Hill for ten years, but didn't go there (my spouse was faculty there). I went to colleges on the West Coast.
Chapel Hill is a FANTASTIC college town. It has one of the most beautiful campuses in the entire country, it's own research hospital, elite basketball (it's hard not to become a bball fan living there). The town has so many great restaurants and shops. I never did get around to trying them all.
I would leave DC in a hot split second to move back there. Quality of life is awesome, COL affordable. If you're looking out of state, it's a great school. Be warned: your kid might want to stay there and live in Raleigh-Durham-Chapel Hill!
Anonymous wrote:Another lax bro Greek party school?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I went to UNC OOS, I am from Virginia. Loved it 100%. I made tons of friends and got a great education. I chose it over UVA and William and Mary.
That's great, but if money is a factor it's not worth it.
+1 I went to UNC as an OOS. I transferred out. Not worth the OOS tuition to go to a school that the in-staters considered their safety.
i don't know any North Carolinians that consider Chapel Hill a safety. And yes, I went there OOS and now my friends' kids are starting to apply there. It is on the same level as UVA. I know plenty of people who couldnt get into either and ended up at UWisconsin - Madison. The OOS acceptance rate at UNC now is ridiculously low, insanely, insanely low. So yes, the kind of kid who can get into UNC OOS is probably also the kind of kid who has the grades/stats/credentials to have a good chance at ivys.
there is a famous UNC basher on DCUM and looks like they're back. They derail every single UNC thread, when people want a sincere discussion. So annoying.