Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote: My DS couldn’t wait to get in the car and leave W & M. The tour guide seemed kind of blah about selling it and overall looked bored and miserable. The school was a lot smaller than we thought but I would say of all the tours we had in VA , this one was the worst.
I was just about to write exactly the same thing! W&M seemed utterly miserable. My DC didn't even want to stay for the information session, even though I insisted. DC couldn't get out of there fast enough.
Why/how?
The entire vibe - the students we encountered - the incredibly dull presentation - the types of kids who were in attendance - I could go on and on. There was honestly not one appealing thing to list. I kept all of that to myself at the time, but when it was clear DC was totally turned off and wanted to leave, I had to agree.
What about the kids who were in attendance was not pleasing?
I think people have gotten so used to the over the top, rah-rah instagram style presentation of big sports schools that when they visit a public school that projects a more low-key, studious and artsy vibe they get turned off.
It’s like people need a cheesy sports-focused hype video at every info session or else they think the school is weird.
Our tour guide was visually offensive and her spiel was riddled with unfunny, uncomfortable sarcasm. Complete and absolute turnoff.
Our William &Mary tour guide was a hottie. My with wanted to get his number, I'm not sure whether for her or our daughter.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Some of the big name schools don't live up to the hype in person. Harvard...the campus does not look as good as you would think. Berkeley also disappointing, especially city area around campus. Same thing with Penn. Great schools people are lucky to go to...but they don't feel as good on a tour as expected.
Berkeley, Harvard, and Penn are in major cities. Either people are looking for an urban campus or not.
UCLA is in the city but the area around it is way nicer than Berkeley. Area around Brown is nicer than Penn.
Area around Harvard is fantastic...the campus just wasn't as impressive as I expected for the #1 US school. Oxford and Cambridge are much more impressive looking.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My son is at William and Mary and is as Type B as they come. He's working, but not that hard. It's not everyone's vibe for sure, but all students aren't stressed out, straight A strivers. Mine loves it.
Moms still clinging to the old days desperately try to perpetuate those stereotypes as much as possible so they can relive the high school bullying days
DP. Huh? Noticing the definite vibe on campus is not "perpetuating stereotypes" or "bullying." But by all means, continue to add to those impressions with your bizarre posts.
It's the judgemental way you describe people like you're superior to them, if you had an ounce of self awareness you'd recognize that.
DP.
What are you talking about?
+1
And *who* is that PP talking to? Weird.
If you're not smart enough to figure out how the back button works you probably shouldn't be talking down to others
DP.
Even reading the back and forth it's unclear if the PP is talking about parents of students or random haters on this forum.
It was directed at the people on this forum making nasty comments about teenagers and young adults.
Oh, okay. Agreed. That comment by someone about the tour guide was totally rude.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My son is at William and Mary and is as Type B as they come. He's working, but not that hard. It's not everyone's vibe for sure, but all students aren't stressed out, straight A strivers. Mine loves it.
Moms still clinging to the old days desperately try to perpetuate those stereotypes as much as possible so they can relive the high school bullying days
DP. Huh? Noticing the definite vibe on campus is not "perpetuating stereotypes" or "bullying." But by all means, continue to add to those impressions with your bizarre posts.
It's the judgemental way you describe people like you're superior to them, if you had an ounce of self awareness you'd recognize that.
DP.
What are you talking about?
+1
And *who* is that PP talking to? Weird.
If you're not smart enough to figure out how the back button works you probably shouldn't be talking down to others
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Some of the big name schools don't live up to the hype in person. Harvard...the campus does not look as good as you would think. Berkeley also disappointing, especially city area around campus. Same thing with Penn. Great schools people are lucky to go to...but they don't feel as good on a tour as expected.
Berkeley, Harvard, and Penn are in major cities. Either people are looking for an urban campus or not.