Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Virginia Tech. Declared it "in the middle of nowhere" and "bleak."
+1 This was unfortunately DC's response also.
same here
Interesting. I thought the campus (Hokie stone) was wonderful and could really see our DS there. Great food. Super engineering program. DS went to UVA instead but I really liked our tours and visits at VT.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Virginia Tech. Declared it "in the middle of nowhere" and "bleak."
+1 This was unfortunately DC's response also.
same here
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:that’s odd, as Mt Holyoke has a big international population, and it’s not all rich kids like some of the colleges courting foreign tuition.Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Admissions rep.from Mt. Holyoke asked me where we summered. Nope. Not gonna fit in there.
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Do you think that a lot of poor college students from other countries wind up at one of the original 7 sister colleges? I heard about one who had to be taught how to do laundry because in her home country, this task was handled exclusively by servants. (Though, I understand in many countries that is much more common than here).
But yeah, MHC is not notorious for having privileged kids. I would say Conn and Middlebury are worse for that.
Anonymous wrote:that’s odd, as Mt Holyoke has a big international population, and it’s not all rich kids like some of the colleges courting foreign tuition.Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Admissions rep.from Mt. Holyoke asked me where we summered. Nope. Not gonna fit in there.
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Anonymous wrote:Don’t give oxygen to the irritating posters hijacking this thread to argue about other stuff
My kid- said no to Pitt because of the area. Plus it felt like all the kids were from suburban DC.
Tufts fell off the list because it also seemed too homogenous - suburban upper middle class kids from the mid Atlantic.
Anonymous wrote:Don’t give oxygen to the irritating posters hijacking this thread to argue about other stuff
My kid- said no to Pitt because of the area. Plus it felt like all the kids were from suburban DC.
Tufts fell off the list because it also seemed too homogenous - suburban upper middle class kids from the mid Atlantic.
that’s odd, as Mt Holyoke has a big international population, and it’s not all rich kids like some of the colleges courting foreign tuition.Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Admissions rep.from Mt. Holyoke asked me where we summered. Nope. Not gonna fit in there.
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Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Virginia Tech. Declared it "in the middle of nowhere" and "bleak."
+1 This was unfortunately DC's response also.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
I've got two straight white boys in NoVA public schools and this is not the case. Kids do debate in class and have differing opinions on things of course. But in my experience, what is more the case is that there are increasing social media accounts that are "grooming" nerdy young white boys to see the world this way (my kids have told me about it and have even shown me sample humor/gaming that drew them in initially and then started introducing more alt-right, white male grievance kind of content). If I were PP I would take a look, bc it can lead to some dark places (unless you're just trying to "stir the grievance pot" too.
This is interesting and scary. Thank you for sharing. I guess it's how those extremist groups recruit - convince these kids that they are being targeted and encourage them to find support in the group? I had no idea gaming was a tool in that.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Pitt: the fairly urban concrete high-rises without air conditioning for Freshmen combined with the church-like buildings they highlighted on the tour did not appeal to my senior at all.
+1
+2. Plus DD was really turned off by the tour “pit stop” at an off-campus pop-up Pitt clothing stand, where the proprietor talked about the bargains he offered. Yes, that was a sanctioned part of the tour. Very weird.