Anonymous wrote:PP above to clarify, 40k/year
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Previous poster.
Sorry for the typo. (I omitted a word).
"Very STEM focused and kind of a hard fit if you're NOT turned on by that".
I was not a STEM major at CWRU so it wasn't the best fit for me.
For others it was their dream environment.
could you share what you did study there?
I ended up majoring in nursing. The nursing school at Case is top 10 in the country (often top 5, depending on the year and rating source).
Cleveland itself was fine. As I mentioned, I loved the snow. There are many great restaurants, etc. Honestly, it's not that different than DC.
If you're talking NYC, Boston or Chicago, most US cities are very similar.
DP. I really don't understand the Cleveland hate. The area in Cleveland where CWRU is located is actually amazing. Lots of green space, no towering buildings, Little Italy to one side of campus, The Cleveland Clinc directly to the other side, the Cleveland Botanical Garden is literally on campus, same with the Cleveland Orchestra and the Cleveland Museum of Art with the Cleveland Museum of National History just a few blocks away. CWRU is like attending school on the DC Mall, but except for 85% humidity you have really cold temps and snow (so weather-wise it is more what you are into or can stand)
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Previous poster.
Sorry for the typo. (I omitted a word).
"Very STEM focused and kind of a hard fit if you're NOT turned on by that".
I was not a STEM major at CWRU so it wasn't the best fit for me.
For others it was their dream environment.
could you share what you did study there?
I ended up majoring in nursing. The nursing school at Case is top 10 in the country (often top 5, depending on the year and rating source).
Cleveland itself was fine. As I mentioned, I loved the snow. There are many great restaurants, etc. Honestly, it's not that different than DC.
If you're talking NYC, Boston or Chicago, most US cities are very similar.
DP. I really don't understand the Cleveland hate. The area in Cleveland where CWRU is located is actually amazing. Lots of green space, no towering buildings, Little Italy to one side of campus, The Cleveland Clinc directly to the other side, the Cleveland Botanical Garden is literally on campus, same with the Cleveland Orchestra and the Cleveland Museum of Art with the Cleveland Museum of National History just a few blocks away. CWRU is like attending school on the DC Mall, but except for 85% humidity you have really cold temps and snow (so weather-wise it is more what you are into or can stand)
+1000 This.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Previous poster.
Sorry for the typo. (I omitted a word).
"Very STEM focused and kind of a hard fit if you're NOT turned on by that".
I was not a STEM major at CWRU so it wasn't the best fit for me.
For others it was their dream environment.
could you share what you did study there?
I ended up majoring in nursing. The nursing school at Case is top 10 in the country (often top 5, depending on the year and rating source).
Cleveland itself was fine. As I mentioned, I loved the snow. There are many great restaurants, etc. Honestly, it's not that different than DC.
If you're talking NYC, Boston or Chicago, most US cities are very similar.
DP. I really don't understand the Cleveland hate. The area in Cleveland where CWRU is located is actually amazing. Lots of green space, no towering buildings, Little Italy to one side of campus, The Cleveland Clinc directly to the other side, the Cleveland Botanical Garden is literally on campus, same with the Cleveland Orchestra and the Cleveland Museum of Art with the Cleveland Museum of National History just a few blocks away. CWRU is like attending school on the DC Mall, but except for 85% humidity you have really cold temps and snow (so weather-wise it is more what you are into or can stand)
Anonymous wrote:To PPs with all the kids and friends who chose Case over other schools, what was the merit aid situation? How much $$ are these super high stats kids getting? Do humanities majors get merit $ or just STEM?
Thx
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:To PPs with all the kids and friends who chose Case over other schools, what was the merit aid situation? How much $$ are these super high stats kids getting? Do humanities majors get merit $ or just STEM?
Thx
DS went test optional and got 40k. 4.4W gpa
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Previous poster.
Sorry for the typo. (I omitted a word).
"Very STEM focused and kind of a hard fit if you're NOT turned on by that".
I was not a STEM major at CWRU so it wasn't the best fit for me.
For others it was their dream environment.
could you share what you did study there?
I ended up majoring in nursing. The nursing school at Case is top 10 in the country (often top 5, depending on the year and rating source).
Cleveland itself was fine. As I mentioned, I loved the snow. There are many great restaurants, etc. Honestly, it's not that different than DC.
If you're talking NYC, Boston or Chicago, most US cities are very similar.
DP. I really don't understand the Cleveland hate. The area in Cleveland where CWRU is located is actually amazing. Lots of green space, no towering buildings, Little Italy to one side of campus, The Cleveland Clinc directly to the other side, the Cleveland Botanical Garden is literally on campus, same with the Cleveland Orchestra and the Cleveland Museum of Art with the Cleveland Museum of National History just a few blocks away. CWRU is like attending school on the DC Mall, but except for 85% humidity you have really cold temps and snow (so weather-wise it is more what you are into or can stand)
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Previous poster.
Sorry for the typo. (I omitted a word).
"Very STEM focused and kind of a hard fit if you're NOT turned on by that".
I was not a STEM major at CWRU so it wasn't the best fit for me.
For others it was their dream environment.
could you share what you did study there?
I ended up majoring in nursing. The nursing school at Case is top 10 in the country (often top 5, depending on the year and rating source).
Cleveland itself was fine. As I mentioned, I loved the snow. There are many great restaurants, etc. Honestly, it's not that different than DC.
If you're talking NYC, Boston or Chicago, most US cities are very similar.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I think Case is the most underrated college and can't wait until next year when we can put it on my DC's list.
I think it's because (based on my experience with my older DC) their marketing arm is terrible.
I'm sorry I cannot answer your exact question, OP, I hope someone can
And bc it's . . . Cleveland.
Where did you go to college?
Not a relevant metric. I did just fine.
I think it's relevant. You are criticizing the location of a college and by extension, the people who choose to go there.
So, where is this magical location you chose? Thanks.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Previous poster.
Sorry for the typo. (I omitted a word).
"Very STEM focused and kind of a hard fit if you're NOT turned on by that".
I was not a STEM major at CWRU so it wasn't the best fit for me.
For others it was their dream environment.
could you share what you did study there?
Anonymous wrote:To PPs with all the kids and friends who chose Case over other schools, what was the merit aid situation? How much $$ are these super high stats kids getting? Do humanities majors get merit $ or just STEM?
Thx
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I think Case is the most underrated college and can't wait until next year when we can put it on my DC's list.
I think it's because (based on my experience with my older DC) their marketing arm is terrible.
I'm sorry I cannot answer your exact question, OP, I hope someone can
And bc it's . . . Cleveland.
Where did you go to college?
Not a relevant metric. I did just fine.