Anonymous wrote:I wish there were a way to validate that the responses are actually coming from people who attended the colleges they are now denigrating.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Duke. So insanely pompous, and the kids there wear their pretense on their sleeves. Also extremely "white". Racism and micro-aggressions are fairly standard, and the Greek life only magnifies those issues.
When did you graduate? I am class of ‘07 and the culture was super weird. The campus was actually 40% POC but it seemed like everything revolves around the rich white kids who were in frats. It’s a very self segregated campus. White people did not want to befriend POC. Just kind of a nasty place all around for me as a POC.
Class of '02. My cousin who graduated much more recently, in '16, reported the same exact experiences. It is a weird culture indeed. There were other POCs who I would befriend at Duke who would very clearly think of themselves as superior to me because they were more "in" with the white crowd, and were not ashamed to communicate that. I got a decent education, but wonder what my experience would have been at a slightly more welcoming or genuinely inclusive campus.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Not sure it counts as a "good" college, but Syracuse. I had a great time there, but the overall student body is mediocre and not very intelligent, and it is so darn expensive. No way I would let my child attend there today.
+1
Anonymous wrote:Michigan
-- overwhelmingly huge; over 50,000 students, 30,000 undergrads
-- dovetailing above, bureaucracy is bloated beyond belief; it's daunting and exhausting
-- bottom 20% of LSA are legitimately dumb
-- location is cold and grey most of the school year
-- Mid-Michigan is dreary and isolated; spare me the Ann Arbor "great" college town rankings nonsense
-- Greek life and pseudo pro sports control campus
-- Lots of cocaine use
-- Everyone from out of state was rejected from all private top 20s and the top UC campuses, so they have an obnoxious insecure chip on their shoulder
-- dovetailing above, there's a lot of over-the-top and tacky bragging and flashing of money
If you truly seek a school environment like Michigan, I'm not sure why you wouldn't just go to USC. Or even Georgia, Clemson, UNC, Texas, UVA, Alabama. Honestly, nobody cares about Michigan "top 30" standing, our BA/BS degrees are treated like any other large public university.