Anonymous wrote:Hi I was led to this thread by searching the forum for more info on Lewis & Clark. Any info the PNWers can share on this one?
Different from OP- kid is undecided major. Not really stem. Loves history, english, might entertain business. Will prob end up needing a masters at some point do trying to keep undergrad costs low. We are in MD and UMD is first choice due to cost but he is really interested in Oregon and Washington.
See L&C offers aid which could work. Also now intrigued by Western Washington.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OSU is solid for STEM & CS, stronger than UO, and Corvallis is a better town than Eugene.
Lmao for what, affordability since no one wants to live there?
Anonymous wrote:OSU is solid for STEM & CS, stronger than UO, and Corvallis is a better town than Eugene.
Anonymous wrote:I'd like to hear more about Whitman – I've seen it compared to some East Coast LACs like Bates, Colby, Skidmore, maybe Kenyon in Ohio. Not sure it has the name recognition of those, but I've heard it's decent in biology and other STEM in addition to the typical LAC humanities.
From my last visit (years ago) Walla Walla is a cute town – maybe with more appeal for wine-loving parents – but probably a bit of a haul from other parts of the country.
Anonymous wrote:Hi I was led to this thread by searching the forum for more info on Lewis & Clark. Any info the PNWers can share on this one?
Different from OP- kid is undecided major. Not really stem. Loves history, english, might entertain business. Will prob end up needing a masters at some point do trying to keep undergrad costs low. We are in MD and UMD is first choice due to cost but he is really interested in Oregon and Washington.
See L&C offers aid which could work. Also now intrigued by Western Washington.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:How about University of Puget Sound?
A nice little campus but it's crime filled Tacoma . Yuck.
Tacoma has changed a lot and I often feel safer down there than in Seattle. It has the energy Seattle had a decade ago and more civic pride.
However, UPS isn’t a school I would want my local child to attend, let alone a kid from the east coast. It’s not bad, just not special enough in any way to warrant moving across the country.
UW OOS for any major is a crapshoot unless you have a strong “why UW” story to sell. SeattleU is a great option if you want a foothold on the west coast for a tech related career. WSU isn’t going to get the career traction in the field that you need if you don’t have local connections. I don’t think Reed, Whitman or Lewis & Clark are the right fit for an engineering major.
Have you considered Western Washington? It’s a vibrant campus, a beautiful part of the state, and a strong alumni network for a state school. I know a lot of people who went there from OOS that have had very interesting careers all around the world…and are now settled in Seattle.
-Seattle resident
Hi, Seattle resident. I’m very interested in why you consider WWU worth traveling across the country for, but not UPS. Is that distinction mostly about cost of attendance? Or is there some other factor at play? DC loves PNW and has been eyeing both, so any insights welcome.
Cost is one. Location and sense of place is bigger- campus feels very much like it is in the heart of the Pacific Northwest and if your child is drawn to the area, UPS doesn’t feel the same sense of geography and place. Campus is stunning especially if you’re not used to hills and firs and water. Western is very outdoorsy and it is easy to ski, hike, or do things on the water in a casual or organized way. I’m fairly sure it’s a larger school than UPS but more importantly, it draws students from both Washington and OOS. Because it is not the state flagship, it isn’t impossible to get into as an OOS student. But because a lot of in-state students self-select for the location and vibe, the student body feels more intelligent and worldly than they should for the school’s ranking.
Downside: it’s a drive from Seattle or a long shuttle ride, or a really inconvenient connecting flight. Downtown Bellingham can be seedy at the same time that it’s quaint and fun, and like all PNW cities, there are drugs and transient people.
UPS feels less connected to the mountains and forests than WWU- the campus is in a more urban setting and what’s closer is more the Sound and islands. It’s also closer to JBLM and the surrounding areas have a different culture than the more liberal vibe of the areas surrounding Seattle. If you can swing a visit, fly into Sea Tac, spend the night in Tacoma (look up the Silver Cloud Point Ruston- it is new and in a beautiful setting that’s safe and convenient) and spend a day at UPS and another night in Tacoma. Drive to Bellingham early in the morning (6 am) and spend the day and another night up there. Traffic between Tacoma and Bellingham is far worse than Google maps says it is.
Anonymous wrote:I'd like to hear more about Whitman – I've seen it compared to some East Coast LACs like Bates, Colby, Skidmore, maybe Kenyon in Ohio. Not sure it has the name recognition of those, but I've heard it's decent in biology and other STEM in addition to the typical LAC humanities.
From my last visit (years ago) Walla Walla is a cute town – maybe with more appeal for wine-loving parents – but probably a bit of a haul from other parts of the country.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:How about University of Puget Sound?
A nice little campus but it's crime filled Tacoma . Yuck.
Tacoma has changed a lot and I often feel safer down there than in Seattle. It has the energy Seattle had a decade ago and more civic pride.
However, UPS isn’t a school I would want my local child to attend, let alone a kid from the east coast. It’s not bad, just not special enough in any way to warrant moving across the country.
UW OOS for any major is a crapshoot unless you have a strong “why UW” story to sell. SeattleU is a great option if you want a foothold on the west coast for a tech related career. WSU isn’t going to get the career traction in the field that you need if you don’t have local connections. I don’t think Reed, Whitman or Lewis & Clark are the right fit for an engineering major.
Have you considered Western Washington? It’s a vibrant campus, a beautiful part of the state, and a strong alumni network for a state school. I know a lot of people who went there from OOS that have had very interesting careers all around the world…and are now settled in Seattle.
-Seattle resident
Hi, Seattle resident. I’m very interested in why you consider WWU worth traveling across the country for, but not UPS. Is that distinction mostly about cost of attendance? Or is there some other factor at play? DC loves PNW and has been eyeing both, so any insights welcome.
Cost is one. Location and sense of place is bigger- campus feels very much like it is in the heart of the Pacific Northwest and if your child is drawn to the area, UPS doesn’t feel the same sense of geography and place. Campus is stunning especially if you’re not used to hills and firs and water. Western is very outdoorsy and it is easy to ski, hike, or do things on the water in a casual or organized way. I’m fairly sure it’s a larger school than UPS but more importantly, it draws students from both Washington and OOS. Because it is not the state flagship, it isn’t impossible to get into as an OOS student. But because a lot of in-state students self-select for the location and vibe, the student body feels more intelligent and worldly than they should for the school’s ranking.
Downside: it’s a drive from Seattle or a long shuttle ride, or a really inconvenient connecting flight. Downtown Bellingham can be seedy at the same time that it’s quaint and fun, and like all PNW cities, there are drugs and transient people.
UPS feels less connected to the mountains and forests than WWU- the campus is in a more urban setting and what’s closer is more the Sound and islands. It’s also closer to JBLM and the surrounding areas have a different culture than the more liberal vibe of the areas surrounding Seattle. If you can swing a visit, fly into Sea Tac, spend the night in Tacoma (look up the Silver Cloud Point Ruston- it is new and in a beautiful setting that’s safe and convenient) and spend a day at UPS and another night in Tacoma. Drive to Bellingham early in the morning (6 am) and spend the day and another night up there. Traffic between Tacoma and Bellingham is far worse than Google maps says it is.
This comparison is laughably inaccurate. For starters, WWU's student body is 87% in-state, whereas Puget Sound's student body is 84% out-of-state. Western is a regional state school whereas Puget Sound is a national liberal arts college. The middle 50% of Western students have an SAT between 1090 and 1310. The middle 50% at Puget Sound score between 1130 and 1350.
Both are super outdoorsy and environmental. At Western, you can wake up and greet Mt. Baker every morning, and at Puget Sound, you can do the same with Mt. Rainier. Both groups have active outdoors clubs, where students go hiking, kayaking, skiing, every weekend.
Western probably has a bit more of an "alternative" vibe with Fairhaven College and its on campus farm. Puget Sound is a bit preppier, with an active Greek system (though plenty of more granola independents as well).
Anyway, neither school sounds like a great fit for OP's kid, but I couldn't let the inaccurate comparison stand.
(BTW, I'm a graduate of one institution, and grew up three freeway exits up from the other. I love both mountains equally except really Rainier is my favorite.)
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Western Washington? Beautiful campus
+1 for WWU. The campus is very nice, and the surrounding scenery (Puget Sound, San Juan Islands, Cascade Mountains) is simply gorgeous! Easy trips to Cascades National Park, Seattle and Vancouver. A few hours will get you to Olympia National Park, and a beautiful 3-hour boat ride takes you to Victoria. So much to love about that entire region.
You don't go to Western Washington, Western Oregon, Eastern Washington, or Eastern Oregon from the East Coast. As much as those schools have matured, they are still very much commuter-esque and do not have the social or academic cache to please a high achieving out of state kid.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Western Washington? Beautiful campus
We visited WWU and Seattle U a few years ago. At Seattle U, I asked a student walking by where a certain building was, and he gestured across the street and explained where it was. At WWU, I asked a student where a certain building was, and he said, “Follow me!” FWIW.
Sounds about right. The local kids I know who go to Seattle U are decent but spoiled and not super smart Catholic school kids. The kids I know who go to Western are down-to-earth and mature.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:How about University of Puget Sound?
A nice little campus but it's crime filled Tacoma . Yuck.
Tacoma has changed a lot and I often feel safer down there than in Seattle. It has the energy Seattle had a decade ago and more civic pride.
However, UPS isn’t a school I would want my local child to attend, let alone a kid from the east coast. It’s not bad, just not special enough in any way to warrant moving across the country.
UW OOS for any major is a crapshoot unless you have a strong “why UW” story to sell. SeattleU is a great option if you want a foothold on the west coast for a tech related career. WSU isn’t going to get the career traction in the field that you need if you don’t have local connections. I don’t think Reed, Whitman or Lewis & Clark are the right fit for an engineering major.
Have you considered Western Washington? It’s a vibrant campus, a beautiful part of the state, and a strong alumni network for a state school. I know a lot of people who went there from OOS that have had very interesting careers all around the world…and are now settled in Seattle.
-Seattle resident
Hi, Seattle resident. I’m very interested in why you consider WWU worth traveling across the country for, but not UPS. Is that distinction mostly about cost of attendance? Or is there some other factor at play? DC loves PNW and has been eyeing both, so any insights welcome.
Cost is one. Location and sense of place is bigger- campus feels very much like it is in the heart of the Pacific Northwest and if your child is drawn to the area, UPS doesn’t feel the same sense of geography and place. Campus is stunning especially if you’re not used to hills and firs and water. Western is very outdoorsy and it is easy to ski, hike, or do things on the water in a casual or organized way. I’m fairly sure it’s a larger school than UPS but more importantly, it draws students from both Washington and OOS. Because it is not the state flagship, it isn’t impossible to get into as an OOS student. But because a lot of in-state students self-select for the location and vibe, the student body feels more intelligent and worldly than they should for the school’s ranking.
Downside: it’s a drive from Seattle or a long shuttle ride, or a really inconvenient connecting flight. Downtown Bellingham can be seedy at the same time that it’s quaint and fun, and like all PNW cities, there are drugs and transient people.
UPS feels less connected to the mountains and forests than WWU- the campus is in a more urban setting and what’s closer is more the Sound and islands. It’s also closer to JBLM and the surrounding areas have a different culture than the more liberal vibe of the areas surrounding Seattle. If you can swing a visit, fly into Sea Tac, spend the night in Tacoma (look up the Silver Cloud Point Ruston- it is new and in a beautiful setting that’s safe and convenient) and spend a day at UPS and another night in Tacoma. Drive to Bellingham early in the morning (6 am) and spend the day and another night up there. Traffic between Tacoma and Bellingham is far worse than Google maps says it is.