Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I think but please correct me if not - that Vanderbilt's Peabody School is a separate school - ie you would be applying to the Peabody School, and your acceptance would be for that only. And that you are not permitted once in Peabody to transfer to the college of arts and sciences or any other school within Vandy. They do not want people applying to Peabody as a perceived easier way to gain admittance to the university.
Others will know best - I've got one at Vandy but in arts and sciences there. It's a great experience in a great school & great town.
You are easily able to switch from Peabody to A&S.
Nope, undergraduate education majors are actively encouraged to take a secondary major in A&S connected to their content area. This is fairly typical of any strong program.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I think but please correct me if not - that Vanderbilt's Peabody School is a separate school - ie you would be applying to the Peabody School, and your acceptance would be for that only. And that you are not permitted once in Peabody to transfer to the college of arts and sciences or any other school within Vandy. They do not want people applying to Peabody as a perceived easier way to gain admittance to the university.
Others will know best - I've got one at Vandy but in arts and sciences there. It's a great experience in a great school & great town.
You are easily able to switch from Peabody to A&S.
Anonymous wrote:Are you wealthy? If so, then whatever. If not, then JMU for teaching. If you think he’ll or want him to) consider other majors, then go to a school with a range of majors and focus on getting summer internships.
Anonymous wrote:Why apply to elite universities if he is interested in Vanderbilt. Just apply there and to similar schools.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I think but please correct me if not - that Vanderbilt's Peabody School is a separate school - ie you would be applying to the Peabody School, and your acceptance would be for that only. And that you are not permitted once in Peabody to transfer to the college of arts and sciences or any other school within Vandy. They do not want people applying to Peabody as a perceived easier way to gain admittance to the university.
Others will know best - I've got one at Vandy but in arts and sciences there. It's a great experience in a great school & great town.
You are easily able to switch from Peabody to A&S.
Anonymous wrote:I think but please correct me if not - that Vanderbilt's Peabody School is a separate school - ie you would be applying to the Peabody School, and your acceptance would be for that only. And that you are not permitted once in Peabody to transfer to the college of arts and sciences or any other school within Vandy. They do not want people applying to Peabody as a perceived easier way to gain admittance to the university.
Others will know best - I've got one at Vandy but in arts and sciences there. It's a great experience in a great school & great town.
I think it will help a LOT, esp. if DC is sincere. He can shift into corporate consulting, sales, counselling etc.Anonymous wrote:My son wants to be a middle school teacher. He has high rigor, great grades at a top DMV private. 1550. Dream school is Vanderbilt or similar places. looking at applying as an education major or at a minimum emphasizing education in essays, etc,
All extracurriculars support this: paid jobs at camps, volunteering at an elementary school, head of Best Buddies, paid internship at a Dept of health doing peer education etc.
Do you think applying to elite universities with a strong interest in education helps or hurts one's cause? It's not a popular choose these days (good) but may not be viewed as enough of an aspirational career (potentially bad?... don't these schools mostly want kids who have the raw material to future tech CEOs, etc? Kind of kidding but not.
Thoughts?