Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Very niche indeed. I'm sympathetic to the presumably very personal issue that prompted the PP to address the health issue, but it's kind of a weird tool to judge a university. And 95% is more like 99.5% who don't have a beef with administration because of absences.
Are you aware of current research showing the large percentage of college students with poor health and poor mental health? It’s not so niche
Anonymous wrote:But it looks like Yale fixed the problem.
Anonymous wrote:Very niche indeed. I'm sympathetic to the presumably very personal issue that prompted the PP to address the health issue, but it's kind of a weird tool to judge a university. And 95% is more like 99.5% who don't have a beef with administration because of absences.
Anonymous wrote:Students are not protected with the same rights regarding their health here as they would be in the States. The University will not excuse classes missed because of illness. Even with Doctors’ letters, because they don’t have to. People with jobs cannot be fired from jobs if they have health problems. They are protected under disability rights laws.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I only know people who super loved St Andrews and a couple families who have sent multiple kids. I will say these are mostly well off people from nyc (there is a cohort of NYers there), who wouldn't look to the college (any college) for mental health help, etc. Also, two of the families I know have actually bought property there bcs the housing is so bad - and that turned out to be a great investment. (Sold for double a few years later).
Anyway, I think it and other UK schools are an interesting option. It's more hands off, but a lot of us in NYC didn't have high schools that were very hands on tbh. I certainly don't think knowing someone there who is self-centered is meaningful. I mean, look around.
OMG that says everything. Do you have any idea how entitled you sound?
I knew British families who did the same. What they did was to buy a basic flat with an extra bedroom or two that would be rented out to the kid's friends. After graduation the flat was sold and often for a decent profit. They were not rich families, just upper middle class.
and just how many families on here can afford to buy a scottish flat?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Be careful with this place. Our son loved it, but there’s a lot of anti American sentiment from the administration. We never thought we’d need to worry about the negative things we’d read about the school, but it’s there and can affect your student if something comes up. They are trying to raise as much cash as possible from the Americans, but they resent us. Also - there is not enough housing, on campus or off. It’s a huge problem that they dont mention until your freshman has no place to live and gets housed on a satellite campus in a different city an hour away !
+1. I’m glad you reactivated this thread. My DD is at a similar British school abd is experiencing the same anti-American brush off. You are totally on your own