Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Pomona is well known to those in the know. Outside the city of Pomona, however, there can be problems with name recognition. JHU, however, is well known to those in the know as well as the general public. JHU is known even to gifted elementary school students who are tested for JHU CTY gifted education program from 4th grade on.
How much do you reallyreally know about Pomona College and it’s recognition? I question this because Pomona College is not in the city of Pomona. Good try though!
Anonymous wrote:Pomona does not really have a "SoCal lifestyle" feel. That would be more like UCLA, UCI, UCSD, USC, or Pepperdine.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP, I went to Hopkins, albeit as an engineering major. I graduated 20 years ago.
My experience was yes, there were lots of focused kids, who would lock themselves away in the library and labs and basically isolate themselves from the world. But there are lots of other kids there who want to get involved and engage in activities. The offerings have gotten much better since I've left - more facilities, more resources, etc.
As an undergrad, I had lots of opportunities for grad work. I could take grad-level classes, and I did research. I had access to professors, and found the good ones really supported the undergrads.
Around here, there is definitely more name recognition of Hopkins than Pomona. That said, I imagine it's the reverse on the west coast.
Everyone knows Hopkins in the West Coast. Outside the city of Pomona, Pomona has no name recognition, at least among the general public.
Anonymous wrote:Pomona is well known to those in the know. Outside the city of Pomona, however, there can be problems with name recognition. JHU, however, is well known to those in the know as well as the general public. JHU is known even to gifted elementary school students who are tested for JHU CTY gifted education program from 4th grade on.
Anonymous wrote:JH for STEM, Pomona for lib arts.
JH is awesome for bio, chem, engineering, pre-med, physics, math, etc.
Pomona is pushed by the Big 3 for their middle students who like to write and will go to grad school to really pick a discipline or job tract.
Anonymous wrote:JH for STEM, Pomona for lib arts.
JH is awesome for bio, chem, engineering, pre-med, physics, math, etc.
Pomona is pushed by the Big 3 for their middle students who like to write and will go to grad school to really pick a discipline or job tract.
Anonymous wrote:Almost no one knows Pomona outside Pomona.
Anonymous wrote:OP, I went to Hopkins, albeit as an engineering major. I graduated 20 years ago.
My experience was yes, there were lots of focused kids, who would lock themselves away in the library and labs and basically isolate themselves from the world. But there are lots of other kids there who want to get involved and engage in activities. The offerings have gotten much better since I've left - more facilities, more resources, etc.
As an undergrad, I had lots of opportunities for grad work. I could take grad-level classes, and I did research. I had access to professors, and found the good ones really supported the undergrads.
Around here, there is definitely more name recognition of Hopkins than Pomona. That said, I imagine it's the reverse on the west coast.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:JHU is the better choice given his interests and aspirations. It’s an excellent place to check out academia as an undergrad. You have easy access to profs as well as to grad students and classes.
JHU is cut throat and unpleasant near as we can tell from numerous sources.