Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Or, it could be because the schools are cheaper and sometimes easier to get into.
Huh. On my DC block alone, we have current students at: Vandy, Tulane, Rice, Charleston and Clemson.
Which of these are the cheap ones, again?
Sounds like a lot philistines and kids frozen out of t15s
Vanderbilt and Rice are both T15 schools. They are both more highly ranked than Columbia, Cornell, Berkeley, Notre Dame, UCLA, Georgetown, Michigan and so on and so forth. It's not just rubes, philistines, and sorority girls who are choosing to go to school in the south. And I don't think the kids going to Duke, Vandy, or Rice are particularly influenced by TikTok. It is possible to get a very good education in the South.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Or, it could be because the schools are cheaper and sometimes easier to get into.
Huh. On my DC block alone, we have current students at: Vandy, Tulane, Rice, Charleston and Clemson.
Which of these are the cheap ones, again?
Sounds like a lot philistines and kids frozen out of t15s
Anonymous wrote:Or, it could be because the schools are cheaper and sometimes easier to get into.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Or, it could be because the schools are cheaper and sometimes easier to get into.
Huh. On my DC block alone, we have current students at: Vandy, Tulane, Rice, Charleston and Clemson.
Which of these are the cheap ones, again?
Anonymous wrote:Or, it could be because the schools are cheaper and sometimes easier to get into.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Or, it could be that the South has warm weather, jobs, and affordable homes
And very photogenic sorority girls
yeah that's why to pick a college...then again it's Alabama...
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I actually think Alabama rushtok is a huge negative to a lot of people.
But probably not to those who subscribe to TikTok.
My junior daughter is on tik tok a lot, but Bama Rush was a huge negative for her. Minimal or zero Greek presence is one of her top college criteria.
I am curious whether you have enough self-awareness to realize that’s deviant of normal behavior, right? That’s highly unusual that going out of your way to not have Greek life would actually be a criterion. And yet you say it like you think it’s a virtue or something.
The masses are definitely influenced by the marketing of sororities in TT though
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:As a resident in MA where southern schools are not of much interest….are these schools mostly white? Sports centric? I recall a threat on UNC that discussed posters DCs regularly heard the N-word mentioned. Honestly shocking. Not to be antagonistic but perhaps the #s a police to NE are actually sensible.
No. I think this is a common misperception among northeasterners. The southeast as a region has more black people than any other region of the US. Southeast is 19% black whereas the northeast is 11% black, Midwest 10% black, west coast 4% black, etc. SEC schools as a whole are 18% black, which is higher than most colleges nationally. To your other question: yes, the southern schools tend to be more sports centric.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:As a resident in MA where southern schools are not of much interest….are these schools mostly white? Sports centric? I recall a threat on UNC that discussed posters DCs regularly heard the N-word mentioned. Honestly shocking. Not to be antagonistic but perhaps the #s a police to NE are actually sensible.
MA (as well as the rest of New England) public universities are obscenely overpriced there for both instate & out-of-state students. You guys should really do something about that.
Anonymous wrote:As a resident in MA where southern schools are not of much interest….are these schools mostly white? Sports centric? I recall a threat on UNC that discussed posters DCs regularly heard the N-word mentioned. Honestly shocking. Not to be antagonistic but perhaps the #s a police to NE are actually sensible.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:No, it’s because they offer instate tuition to kids from our area.
This! Good grades and Alabama can be more affordable than many in-state flagships. If your kid wants greek life, football/basketball environment then it can be a good affordable big school experience