Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Purdue and UIUC for engineering and CS
OMG, tell me you know nothing about top CS/engineering schools in US....
Well you obviously don't
These are good, very good, schools for students interested in those fields and its ridic to pretend otherwise. Think UIUC is in top 5 and Purdue is in top 10.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Purdue and UIUC for engineering and CS
OMG, tell me you know nothing about top CS/engineering schools in US....
Well you obviously don't
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Purdue and UIUC for engineering and CS
OMG, tell me you know nothing about top CS/engineering schools in US....
Anonymous wrote:Purdue and UIUC for engineering and CS
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Utah[/quote]
only if LDS
SUCH a misconception on the East Coast - but that just makes it easier to get in for those that know better.
Anonymous wrote:Purdue for CS - their new computing initiative aims to have the program (currently 16) easily in the top 10 in the next few years. Huge name recognition on the West Coast and internationally.
yes - very popular with rich kids while aren’t that academicAnonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Iowa
Colorado and Colorado State
University of Charleston for those kids who aren't academically inclined
Baylor and SMU (medicine and business, respectively)
College of Charleston???
Yeah, sorry. As you can see, this one wasn't really on our radar. But it seems really popular among our DC/Bethesda acquaintances with kids who are not so academic and who enjoy the good life and who are full pay. See also, Elon and High Point.
Anonymous wrote:Ones that have seemed hot or going to be as we went through this process twice in the past two years:
U Denver
CU-Boulder (more than before)
Purdue for CS/Eng
Santa Clara
Utah
Colgate (new aid program)
Elon
UMass-Amherst
State flagships south and west
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Minnesota. It’s the next big rolling admissions school. And they actually want DMV students.
It’s funny, just asked my sister in MN about Minnesota and she thinks it is a fairly depressing college experience. Urban campus that is somewhat broken up with lots of commuters.
I get that kids don’t want to go to college near home, but her suburban HS seems to send way fewer kids nor is thought the same way as UMD for Bethesda/DC kids.
Lots of commuters but area HSs send kids elsewhere?
We may go to the Twin Cities next week for fall break - wondering if your sister has mentioned anything about the vibe at Macalester?