Wow. Actually a school you did like?Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:HS Sophomore at the time:
UVA: "dirty" (I still don't know what this means)
W&L: "too hilly" (98 degrees in July)
High school sophomore and already touring colleges? Obviously you're one of THOSE parents . . . .
Anonymous wrote:HS Sophomore at the time:
UVA: "dirty" (I still don't know what this means)
W&L: "too hilly" (98 degrees in July)
Anonymous wrote:We toured a lot of colleges with our kid. Almost all were immediately and often illogically hated and these are the reasons why. This was in spring and fall of 2019.
JMU: the highway and bus system
VT: hokie this and hokie that all day long
CNU: The walmart down the road had the kitchen knife sets locked behind glass
UVA: hated the campus
URochester: yellow jacket mascot
Lafayette: tour guide referenced Harry Potter and a quidditch team
Marist: tour guide mentioned free tutoring too much
Cornell: everyone was walking and eating alone with airpods in
Ithaca: lots of blue and burgundy hair and black clothes, decided to skip the tour completely
Skidmore: there was some festival in town and lots of guys wearing skirts
UVM: too many beanies for a 60 degree day
Colgate:we literally had to stop the car because a bear was in the road
Villanova:kid misheard the tour guide and spent the whole tour thinking the school had 60,000 students, so had already dismissed it
Anonymous wrote:My older kid dismissed most schools for random reasons.
A few I remember:
Providence College: I can't be a Friar for life
Boston College: The T is too slow out here.
Haverford: the grass is too tall
Anything in the DC area: too close to home (like we want to visit them!!!!!!)
"Not enough trees": this was a bunch of schools, apparently my kid had a "tree quota".
Anonymous wrote:Every college we toured: "We have over 200 clubs! There's a club for everyone! We even have a CHEESE CLUB!"
Anonymous wrote:These impressions come from my two DCs and myself over many years (OP asked for fun takes):
UVA - very pretty and charming, but AO's presentation was offputting and student guide kept talking about how he had really wanted to go to an Ivy
VTech - Gothic prison run by turkeys
W&M - retirement home run by colonial-era cosplayers
Villanova - very small (I know it's not), very Catholic, very safe
Georgetown - compressed feel; younger child said it looked like a larger version of Gonzaga College High School
UNC - more accessible version of UVA (town and university better integrated)
Duke - very high-end shopping mall
Stanford - even higher-end shopping mall
Berkeley - students and homeless reeking of pot
Pitt - area near Tower of Learning is very nice, surprisingly international; area near hospital looked more run down
Michigan - 1950s era architecture surrounding faux-Ivy (law school) and ultra-modern (business school)
Harvard - confused about who is from the university and who is a tourist
Amherst - mini-Harvard, but with a beautiful hill/cliff overlooking the athletic fields
Dartmouth - upscaled prep school in the middle of nowhere
Williams - mini-Dartmouth
Yale - beautiful campus surrounded by meh
Wesleyan - mini-Yale
Cornell - peaks and valleys everywhere
Brown - should have been named Beige
Penn - criticisms of location and environment overblown, actually pretty nice
Columbia - Ghostbusters!
NYU - who actually attends classes here?
Johns Hopkins (medical school) - felt like the Matt Damon movie Elysium brought to life
BU - Fenway Park
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My older kid dismissed most schools for random reasons.
A few I remember:
Providence College: I can't be a Friar for life
Boston College: The T is too slow out here.
Haverford: the grass is too tall
Anything in the DC area: too close to home (like we want to visit them!!!!!!)
"Not enough trees": this was a bunch of schools, apparently my kid had a "tree quota".
Tree quota πππ
Anonymous wrote:My older kid dismissed most schools for random reasons.
A few I remember:
Providence College: I can't be a Friar for life
Boston College: The T is too slow out here.
Haverford: the grass is too tall
Anything in the DC area: too close to home (like we want to visit them!!!!!!)
"Not enough trees": this was a bunch of schools, apparently my kid had a "tree quota".
Anonymous wrote:Every college we toured: "We have over 200 clubs! There's a club for everyone! We even have a CHEESE CLUB!"
Anonymous wrote:These impressions come from my two DCs and myself over many years (OP asked for fun takes):
UVA - very pretty and charming, but AO's presentation was offputting and student guide kept talking about how he had really wanted to go to an Ivy
VTech - Gothic prison run by turkeys
W&M - retirement home run by colonial-era cosplayers
Villanova - very small (I know it's not), very Catholic, very safe
Georgetown - compressed feel; younger child said it looked like a larger version of Gonzaga College High School
UNC - more accessible version of UVA (town and university better integrated)
Duke - very high-end shopping mall
Stanford - even higher-end shopping mall
Berkeley - students and homeless reeking of pot
Pitt - area near Tower of Learning is very nice, surprisingly international; area near hospital looked more run down
Michigan - 1950s era architecture surrounding faux-Ivy (law school) and ultra-modern (business school)
Harvard - confused about who is from the university and who is a tourist
Amherst - mini-Harvard, but with a beautiful hill/cliff overlooking the athletic fields
Dartmouth - upscaled prep school in the middle of nowhere
Williams - mini-Dartmouth
Yale - beautiful campus surrounded by meh
Wesleyan - mini-Yale
Cornell - peaks and valleys everywhere
Brown - should have been named Beige
Penn - criticisms of location and environment overblown, actually pretty nice
Columbia - Ghostbusters!
NYU - who actually attends classes here?
Johns Hopkins (medical school) - felt like the Matt Damon movie Elysium brought to life
BU - Fenway Park