Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We toured and know people who attended.
-Beautiful campus, town & location--convenient to NYC and Boston
-Gives merit aid; whether that is significant enough is in the eye of the beholder. Don't expect the cost to be under about $36k/year
-Has a ''Country Club Republican'' vibe
-Very wealthy student body
-Strong in ''practical'' fields like nursing, finance, and health sciences (I know someone who graduated last May and is finishing their first year of med school)
-Supposedly kids are kind, willing to try new things, and inclusive
Agreed. This school is very popular with my Northeast, Catholic-ish circle. It has many good things going for it.
I would say it attracts very similar student body to Boston College and Villanova (obviously less selective, but in personality/background...similar). Providence College is also an easy comparison.
I went to BC and had never heard of it. Not sure why PP is getting hounded for being from CT and never having heard of it.
Plenty of no name schools out there willing to gaslight parents into paying their outlandish costs. No different than any “up and coming” neighborhood. The only people biting are the gullible or those with a vested interest.
I guarantee you you are in the minority if you went to BC and never heard of Fairfield. The schools have hundreds if not thousands of cross applicants. Fairfield is a common backup for BC.
Again, saying you haven’t heard of a college doesn’t mean the college isn’t good. It just means you’re uninformed yourself.
Yep. Brother and many of his Fairfield alum buddies went to BC for grad school. I can only guess the BC person is not Catholic, or at least not Jesuit. Jesuit-educated students would all know Fairfield.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We toured and know people who attended.
-Beautiful campus, town & location--convenient to NYC and Boston
-Gives merit aid; whether that is significant enough is in the eye of the beholder. Don't expect the cost to be under about $36k/year
-Has a ''Country Club Republican'' vibe
-Very wealthy student body
-Strong in ''practical'' fields like nursing, finance, and health sciences (I know someone who graduated last May and is finishing their first year of med school)
-Supposedly kids are kind, willing to try new things, and inclusive
Agreed. This school is very popular with my Northeast, Catholic-ish circle. It has many good things going for it.
I would say it attracts very similar student body to Boston College and Villanova (obviously less selective, but in personality/background...similar). Providence College is also an easy comparison.
I went to BC and had never heard of it. Not sure why PP is getting hounded for being from CT and never having heard of it.
Plenty of no name schools out there willing to gaslight parents into paying their outlandish costs. No different than any “up and coming” neighborhood. The only people biting are the gullible or those with a vested interest.
I guarantee you you are in the minority if you went to BC and never heard of Fairfield. The schools have hundreds if not thousands of cross applicants. Fairfield is a common backup for BC.
Again, saying you haven’t heard of a college doesn’t mean the college isn’t good. It just means you’re uninformed yourself.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We toured and know people who attended.
-Beautiful campus, town & location--convenient to NYC and Boston
-Gives merit aid; whether that is significant enough is in the eye of the beholder. Don't expect the cost to be under about $36k/year
-Has a ''Country Club Republican'' vibe
-Very wealthy student body
-Strong in ''practical'' fields like nursing, finance, and health sciences (I know someone who graduated last May and is finishing their first year of med school)
-Supposedly kids are kind, willing to try new things, and inclusive
Agreed. This school is very popular with my Northeast, Catholic-ish circle. It has many good things going for it.
I would say it attracts very similar student body to Boston College and Villanova (obviously less selective, but in personality/background...similar). Providence College is also an easy comparison.
I went to BC and had never heard of it. Not sure why PP is getting hounded for being from CT and never having heard of it.
Plenty of no name schools out there willing to gaslight parents into paying their outlandish costs. No different than any “up and coming” neighborhood. The only people biting are the gullible or those with a vested interest.
Most “no name schools” don’t charge “outlandish costs.” They give large scholarships.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We toured and know people who attended.
-Beautiful campus, town & location--convenient to NYC and Boston
-Gives merit aid; whether that is significant enough is in the eye of the beholder. Don't expect the cost to be under about $36k/year
-Has a ''Country Club Republican'' vibe
-Very wealthy student body
-Strong in ''practical'' fields like nursing, finance, and health sciences (I know someone who graduated last May and is finishing their first year of med school)
-Supposedly kids are kind, willing to try new things, and inclusive
Agreed. This school is very popular with my Northeast, Catholic-ish circle. It has many good things going for it.
I would say it attracts very similar student body to Boston College and Villanova (obviously less selective, but in personality/background...similar). Providence College is also an easy comparison.
I went to BC and had never heard of it. Not sure why PP is getting hounded for being from CT and never having heard of it.
Plenty of no name schools out there willing to gaslight parents into paying their outlandish costs. No different than any “up and coming” neighborhood. The only people biting are the gullible or those with a vested interest.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We toured and know people who attended.
-Beautiful campus, town & location--convenient to NYC and Boston
-Gives merit aid; whether that is significant enough is in the eye of the beholder. Don't expect the cost to be under about $36k/year
-Has a ''Country Club Republican'' vibe
-Very wealthy student body
-Strong in ''practical'' fields like nursing, finance, and health sciences (I know someone who graduated last May and is finishing their first year of med school)
-Supposedly kids are kind, willing to try new things, and inclusive
Agreed. This school is very popular with my Northeast, Catholic-ish circle. It has many good things going for it.
I would say it attracts very similar student body to Boston College and Villanova (obviously less selective, but in personality/background...similar). Providence College is also an easy comparison.
I went to BC and had never heard of it. Not sure why PP is getting hounded for being from CT and never having heard of it.
Plenty of no name schools out there willing to gaslight parents into paying their outlandish costs. No different than any “up and coming” neighborhood. The only people biting are the gullible or those with a vested interest.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We toured and know people who attended.
-Beautiful campus, town & location--convenient to NYC and Boston
-Gives merit aid; whether that is significant enough is in the eye of the beholder. Don't expect the cost to be under about $36k/year
-Has a ''Country Club Republican'' vibe
-Very wealthy student body
-Strong in ''practical'' fields like nursing, finance, and health sciences (I know someone who graduated last May and is finishing their first year of med school)
-Supposedly kids are kind, willing to try new things, and inclusive
Agreed. This school is very popular with my Northeast, Catholic-ish circle. It has many good things going for it.
I would say it attracts very similar student body to Boston College and Villanova (obviously less selective, but in personality/background...similar). Providence College is also an easy comparison.
I went to BC and had never heard of it. Not sure why PP is getting hounded for being from CT and never having heard of it.
Plenty of no name schools out there willing to gaslight parents into paying their outlandish costs. No different than any “up and coming” neighborhood. The only people biting are the gullible or those with a vested interest.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I grew up in a wealthy part of Connecticut and I had never heard of it. I'd only heard of UConn and Connecticut College in terms of local places.
You cannot be serious. I grew up in Greenwich and now live in another Fairfield County town. Fairfield U. is very well known regionally.
Plus 2. Grew.up in Nearby Westport. To correct a previous poster, Boston is not close (3 hours+)
Stamford to Boston is about 3 hours on the Acela.
Congratulations.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:D liked it and it was strong consideration for her, but ultimately went to a very similar school but more urban. After in college we were talking about it one day and she said she was really glad she didn't go there because people really have nothing to do on weekends except drink.
I’m not sure why you would think that’s the case. It’s walkable to a town center with a bunch of restaurants. Kids go to sports games, club sports competitions, study, walk and do many other things. Like at any school.
Yea, and besides she didn’t go there herself so how the hell could she know? She sounds like a real peach. Fairfield was better off without her.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We toured and know people who attended.
-Beautiful campus, town & location--convenient to NYC and Boston
-Gives merit aid; whether that is significant enough is in the eye of the beholder. Don't expect the cost to be under about $36k/year
-Has a ''Country Club Republican'' vibe
-Very wealthy student body
-Strong in ''practical'' fields like nursing, finance, and health sciences (I know someone who graduated last May and is finishing their first year of med school)
-Supposedly kids are kind, willing to try new things, and inclusive
Agreed. This school is very popular with my Northeast, Catholic-ish circle. It has many good things going for it.
I would say it attracts very similar student body to Boston College and Villanova (obviously less selective, but in personality/background...similar). Providence College is also an easy comparison.