Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:they offer pretty good merit scholarships to oos students but read the terms and conditions carefully
My daughter got a lot of aid here but what do you mean read the terms and conditions carefully?
Yes, please elaborate on these terms and conditions. I’ve seen that the kid has to maintain a 3.0, complete the Prodesse class/project, and maybe be required to write a thank you note in the future for the merit aid. That doesn’t seem so bad.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:they offer pretty good merit scholarships to oos students but read the terms and conditions carefully
My daughter got a lot of aid here but what do you mean read the terms and conditions carefully?
Anonymous wrote:they offer pretty good merit scholarships to oos students but read the terms and conditions carefully
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It’s gone down a lot in stature over the years.
Why do you think that’s the case? They are throwing a lot of money at my DC. We haven’t visited yet and aren’t sure what to think.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It’s gone down a lot in stature over the years.
Why do you think that’s the case? They are throwing a lot of money at my DC. We haven’t visited yet and aren’t sure what to think.
Anonymous wrote:It’s gone down a lot in stature over the years.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anyone visited in person? What is it like? What is Oxford like?
The campus is beautiful. Classic Georgian architecture. Be sure to get out to Western campus (ironically located on the Eastern side of grounds -- it's the former Western College for Women). It's literally one of the most beautiful, prototypical university campuses in the nation. They've filmed movies here because of it (see Clooney's "Ides of March" and Jodie Foster's "Little Man Tate" and the forthcoming "Turtles All the Way Down")
Oxford (called "Uptown") is basically a classic college town. Overrun by students in the school year. Townies resent them. Etc. Frat houses everywhere (Miami is home to like four or five original fraternity chapters -- no sorority houses, just suites on campus due to laws that said unmarried women living together were houses of ill repute).
Not really close to anything. Cincinnati is like 40 minutes away. Dayton nearly an hour.
Great overview. Thanks. Do students find Oxford too small after a while?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anyone visited in person? What is it like? What is Oxford like?
The campus is beautiful. Classic Georgian architecture. Be sure to get out to Western campus (ironically located on the Eastern side of grounds -- it's the former Western College for Women). It's literally one of the most beautiful, prototypical university campuses in the nation. They've filmed movies here because of it (see Clooney's "Ides of March" and Jodie Foster's "Little Man Tate" and the forthcoming "Turtles All the Way Down")
Oxford (called "Uptown") is basically a classic college town. Overrun by students in the school year. Townies resent them. Etc. Frat houses everywhere (Miami is home to like four or five original fraternity chapters -- no sorority houses, just suites on campus due to laws that said unmarried women living together were houses of ill repute).
Not really close to anything. Cincinnati is like 40 minutes away. Dayton nearly an hour.
Great overview. Thanks. Do students find Oxford too small after a while?
Naw, I never did. That said, a favorite thing to do on weekends was to find a friend with a car and go to either Jungle Jim's or Forest Fair Mall. I think the latter is abandoned now, however. (I was there in the early 1990s).
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anyone visited in person? What is it like? What is Oxford like?
The campus is beautiful. Classic Georgian architecture. Be sure to get out to Western campus (ironically located on the Eastern side of grounds -- it's the former Western College for Women). It's literally one of the most beautiful, prototypical university campuses in the nation. They've filmed movies here because of it (see Clooney's "Ides of March" and Jodie Foster's "Little Man Tate" and the forthcoming "Turtles All the Way Down")
Oxford (called "Uptown") is basically a classic college town. Overrun by students in the school year. Townies resent them. Etc. Frat houses everywhere (Miami is home to like four or five original fraternity chapters -- no sorority houses, just suites on campus due to laws that said unmarried women living together were houses of ill repute).
Not really close to anything. Cincinnati is like 40 minutes away. Dayton nearly an hour.
Great overview. Thanks. Do students find Oxford too small after a while?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anyone visited in person? What is it like? What is Oxford like?
The campus is beautiful. Classic Georgian architecture. Be sure to get out to Western campus (ironically located on the Eastern side of grounds -- it's the former Western College for Women). It's literally one of the most beautiful, prototypical university campuses in the nation. They've filmed movies here because of it (see Clooney's "Ides of March" and Jodie Foster's "Little Man Tate" and the forthcoming "Turtles All the Way Down")
Oxford (called "Uptown") is basically a classic college town. Overrun by students in the school year. Townies resent them. Etc. Frat houses everywhere (Miami is home to like four or five original fraternity chapters -- no sorority houses, just suites on campus due to laws that said unmarried women living together were houses of ill repute).
Not really close to anything. Cincinnati is like 40 minutes away. Dayton nearly an hour.
Anonymous wrote:Anyone visited in person? What is it like? What is Oxford like?