Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Ann Arbor is an awesome college town. UMD is not.
'awesome college town' means middle of nowhere, boring, and nothing much to do. Stuck in the school.
No, it means a town that is solely focused on the university, well other than Madison that also has a state capitol.
Ann Arbor is regularly mentioned as one of the top, if not the top, college towns in the entire country. Music, sports, food, clubs, activities, there is always something going on with such a wide variety of people and interests. College Park is a school with essentially a highway running through it and not much in terms of bars and restaurants. It depends on greater DC for cultural and music activities, though it does have a nice bike path running though campus.
wide variety? more than 1 out 2 people you see are from Michigan.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Ann Arbor is an awesome college town. UMD is not.
'awesome college town' means middle of nowhere, boring, and nothing much to do. Stuck in the school.
No, it means a town that is solely focused on the university, well other than Madison that also has a state capitol.
Ann Arbor is regularly mentioned as one of the top, if not the top, college towns in the entire country. Music, sports, food, clubs, activities, there is always something going on with such a wide variety of people and interests. College Park is a school with essentially a highway running through it and not much in terms of bars and restaurants. It depends on greater DC for cultural and music activities, though it does have a nice bike path running though campus.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Ann Arbor is an awesome college town. UMD is not.
'awesome college town' means middle of nowhere, boring, and nothing much to do. Stuck in the school.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Michigan is miserable cold. Nothing to do outside of Ann Arbor.
And yet, Ann Arbor is 1000 times the college experience to College Park. They aren't even close to the same tier of college town experience.
Anonymous wrote:For Umich, is it CS Major in COE or LSA? Both takes the similar classes with LSA has 2 year of language requirements and COE has physics, chem, and multi variables and differential eq. 128 credits needed for COE graduation and 120 for LSA. Very tough CS program. EECS280 (first real CS class) has 1450 kids. Long waiting for help in office hour. 25% will drop/fail the class or take Pass/Fail. The next class EECS 281 is another killer class. If your child has lot of programming experience, it will be good in Umich, otherwise it can easily suck in the weeder classes.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Both are fairly comparable for academically but experience at University of Michigan will be better.
Maybe in CS, but that’s about it.
Anonymous wrote:It is hard to say at this age I know, but if your child wants to live in the DMV after school, MD. Otherwise, MI. MI alum here- I have lived in Europe, Asia, CA, east and west coasts and my degree opened a lot of doors for me with just the brand name. Only place that did not recognize the name as prestigious was the mid-south/south because they worshipped auburn, bana and sewaner. Never had plans to stay there long term though.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If it’s not too much of a financial burden, I’d pick Michigan. Better alumni connections and more of a well rounded college experience.
how so?
Also, would your DC be ok with extreme winter weather?
Anonymous wrote:Michigan is miserable cold. Nothing to do outside of Ann Arbor.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Ann Arbor is an awesome college town. UMD is not.
'awesome college town' means middle of nowhere, boring, and nothing much to do. Stuck in the school.
Anonymous wrote:Ann Arbor is an awesome college town. UMD is not.