Anonymous wrote:How about Drexel?
Anonymous wrote:OP, I think you turn-this-around. Your DD comes to you with a list. You do not problem-solve this. You do not problem-solve this because, of course, compromises are going to have to be made --- she needs to work through this, having done the research herself looking for the unicorn. It will mean something then.
Anonymous wrote:Don’t do Sports Analytics.
That major sets you up for a lot of good jobs if you have a time machine and can travel back to the year 2000. The field is now WAY over subscribed and pay is peanuts, because lots of sports fans want to do it.
The current hot jobs with similar skill sets are data science jobs in many industries. I don’t really see these going away.
tAnonymous wrote:Those grades and that SAT are an odd combination. Does the school inflate grades? Or can she retake the SAT and get a higher score?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:University of Miami.
Has a beautiful campus, ranks in top 50, is neither big nor urban.
Big and urban are relative, at least in this context. We can let OP decide.
It’s hard not to love, but Univ of Miami is neither big nor urban. But check it out anyway — it’s not tiny or rural.
You don't consider Miami to be urban?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:University of Pittsburgh
Temple
University of Vermont (Burlington is more of a town than a city)
Boston University
The New School (NYU)
Duquense University (Pittsburgh)
George Washington University
American University
Missed the part about sports analytics. Sorry, scratch the New School.
OP here - I went to UVM and DH did grad school at GW so she does not want to follow in our footsteps. ;(
With her major, high probability she may not be employable after college. You sure this is what she wants to do and what you want to spend your money on?
Sounds crazy to me.[/quote]
Me too. Unless you can really afford it, I would just tell her she needs to stay in Washington.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:University of Miami.
Has a beautiful campus, ranks in top 50, is neither big nor urban.
Big and urban are relative, at least in this context. We can let OP decide.
It’s hard not to love, but Univ of Miami is neither big nor urban. But check it out anyway — it’s not tiny or rural.
Anonymous wrote:UMass Amherst is not urban at all. What about Pitt (not east coast but urban and big?