Anonymous wrote:But is it a commuter school? ?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:They are both basically community colleges. Only 16% of undergrads live on campus at CS and they don't even have dorms for Denver.
Absolutely not true. Check out this list of notable alums. Chevron's recently named CEO is a grad as well. CU Boulder is a great school, in an incredibly gorgeous environment. Your son/daughter could do a lot worse than spend 4 years in a fantastic university town with great school spirit, super smart kids, top programs in engineering, astronomy, chem and more.
https://www.colorado.edu/alumni/notable-alumni
You can't be this dumb? Please look at the two schools in bold that she is talking about. What are YOU talking about?
+1 she derailed thus entire thread going on an alumni and factual rampage. LOL
Note: everyone including OP knows Boulder is not a commuter college. There is only one person here who has no idea what is going on.
Can we get back in track now?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Idiots, the OP asked about what Colorado Springs and Denver campuses are like, NOT Boulder. The PP's response was about BOTH (CS and D) being commuter schools, compared to Boulder, which they are. Get an f'ing clue!!
I'm so sorry to break this to you. But YOU are wrong. If you first read the title of the post, it is "University of Colorado BOULDER vs. Colorado Springs vs. Denver." That is 3 things, and yes they did mention Boulder. In addition, if you re-read the question, it states:
"Does anyone have any experience with any of these? Is there an academic difference or variablility among THE THREE? I know Boulder is bigger and is the "main" one, as reflected by the significantly higher OOS tuition, but is there a real differentiator in the quality of UG education?"
So in the title, and in the question, THREE schools are mention, not two. They also ask about the ACADEMIC difference, not if one or more are commuter schools. You are rude, obnoxious, and as evidenced by your post, clearly cannot read. The next time you feel like it's appropriate to lash out at someone on an anonymous site, why don't you go back and make sure that it's not YOU who needs to get an f'ing clue?
I'm assuming you're a CU Boulder alum and feel compelled to let you know you're NOT giving the school a very good name...
Nope. Just hate obnoxious people on this site who feel empowered to bully.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:They are both basically community colleges. Only 16% of undergrads live on campus at CS and they don't even have dorms for Denver.
Absolutely not true. Check out this list of notable alums. Chevron's recently named CEO is a grad as well. CU Boulder is a great school, in an incredibly gorgeous environment. Your son/daughter could do a lot worse than spend 4 years in a fantastic university town with great school spirit, super smart kids, top programs in engineering, astronomy, chem and more.
https://www.colorado.edu/alumni/notable-alumni
You can't be this dumb? Please look at the two schools in bold that she is talking about. What are YOU talking about?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Idiots, the OP asked about what Colorado Springs and Denver campuses are like, NOT Boulder. The PP's response was about BOTH (CS and D) being commuter schools, compared to Boulder, which they are. Get an f'ing clue!!
I'm so sorry to break this to you. But YOU are wrong. If you first read the title of the post, it is "University of Colorado BOULDER vs. Colorado Springs vs. Denver." That is 3 things, and yes they did mention Boulder. In addition, if you re-read the question, it states:
"Does anyone have any experience with any of these? Is there an academic difference or variablility among THE THREE? I know Boulder is bigger and is the "main" one, as reflected by the significantly higher OOS tuition, but is there a real differentiator in the quality of UG education?"
So in the title, and in the question, THREE schools are mention, not two. They also ask about the ACADEMIC difference, not if one or more are commuter schools. You are rude, obnoxious, and as evidenced by your post, clearly cannot read. The next time you feel like it's appropriate to lash out at someone on an anonymous site, why don't you go back and make sure that it's not YOU who needs to get an f'ing clue?
I'm assuming you're a CU Boulder alum and feel compelled to let you know you're NOT giving the school a very good name...
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Idiots, the OP asked about what Colorado Springs and Denver campuses are like, NOT Boulder. The PP's response was about BOTH (CS and D) being commuter schools, compared to Boulder, which they are. Get an f'ing clue!!
I'm so sorry to break this to you. But YOU are wrong. If you first read the title of the post, it is "University of Colorado BOULDER vs. Colorado Springs vs. Denver." That is 3 things, and yes they did mention Boulder. In addition, if you re-read the question, it states:
"Does anyone have any experience with any of these? Is there an academic difference or variablility among THE THREE? I know Boulder is bigger and is the "main" one, as reflected by the significantly higher OOS tuition, but is there a real differentiator in the quality of UG education?"
So in the title, and in the question, THREE schools are mention, not two. They also ask about the ACADEMIC difference, not if one or more are commuter schools. You are rude, obnoxious, and as evidenced by your post, clearly cannot read. The next time you feel like it's appropriate to lash out at someone on an anonymous site, why don't you go back and make sure that it's not YOU who needs to get an f'ing clue?