Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I think kids (and parents) with this view are actually very narrow-minded and immature. A cluster of students from your high school will be completely diluted at large state schools like UVA, JMU, and VT. This “continuation of high school” myth is just that…a myth.
That is true for UVA and maybe VA tech but trust me, my kids know clusters of kids from their high schools at both Tech and JMU who are all in the same fraternity or sorority. They did NOT what that experience.
Anonymous wrote:I thinks it’s very common for kids to want to get away either because they think it will be HS all over, they think their parents won’t cut the cord if they are nearby, or they just want to go someplace different than where they have lived their whole lives. That said, there are lots of things I too would like if someone else is willing to pay for it, I’ve learned with my kids is if it’s our money - no problem but when it’s their money and sacrifice involved then you know it’s really important to them.
So our deal is we gave a budget that was a little higher than in-state. To go out of state they needed some combination of things to make it work like merit, job, and loans. So realistically they had to be willing to look OOS, maybe someplace not ranked as high as UMD, in order to maximize the chances of having an OOS option where they could get in and be offered merit.
Anonymous wrote:I think kids (and parents) with this view are actually very narrow-minded and immature. A cluster of students from your high school will be completely diluted at large state schools like UVA, JMU, and VT. This “continuation of high school” myth is just that…a myth.
Anonymous wrote:My DC wanted to go to school out of state and in a completely different area than they grew up. Having lived on the East and West coasts, I completely supported their preference. College can be a a time to reinvent yourself which can be difficult if you attend school with others you went to school with or friends of those who know you.
Out of state schools don’t have to be more expensive than in-state schools. Look at Purdue, the Cal States, McGill, etc
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:There's a lot to be said for getting to be a new person when you start college. I was a wallflower in HS, but went to an out of state private for college and was super social, becoming student body president and the graduation speaker. Sometimes kids don't grow up to be the same person that thry were at 5, 10, 13 or even 16 yo. I know not everyone makes this sort of leap, but it does happen.
I'm the PP who ended up at the local LAC. Yeah, I could've really used this and regret that I didn't learn those social skills to help me in my later years.
I don't think being at the close LAC prevented you from learning these social skills. Like I said up thread, wherever you go, there you are.
Oh yes, you're right. How did any of us on here not realize you are the oracle?
People who paint life in such broad swaths miss out on nuance. For me, I didn't necessarily grasp what was happening in the moment. I did feel hindered by my perceptions of what my HS, now college, classmates would think of me if I stepped out in new and different ways. And it was complicated because I felt terribly lucky to even be in college, a first gen kid, so that was an additional burden I carried as I made my way through school. Grad school for me was probably like what many experience for college, but that came later in life.
You're making sarcastic comments about "not realizing", and then state how you "didn't necessarily grasp what was happening in the moment".
You seem rather clueless about yourself still.
No, I was dissing on their self-righteous snap back.
Anonymous wrote:
(Yes I get that “curious about a different vibe” is not the same thing.
Anonymous wrote:I can understand this. I wanted to go away and have 0 of my high school classmates at my college. And I loved high school and had lots of friends!
The other problem with instate is that even if the other kids aren't from your high school, they're still mostly from your state. It may be a big school, but it feels similar enough to high school.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:There's a lot to be said for getting to be a new person when you start college. I was a wallflower in HS, but went to an out of state private for college and was super social, becoming student body president and the graduation speaker. Sometimes kids don't grow up to be the same person that thry were at 5, 10, 13 or even 16 yo. I know not everyone makes this sort of leap, but it does happen.
I'm the PP who ended up at the local LAC. Yeah, I could've really used this and regret that I didn't learn those social skills to help me in my later years.
I don't think being at the close LAC prevented you from learning these social skills. Like I said up thread, wherever you go, there you are.
Oh yes, you're right. How did any of us on here not realize you are the oracle?
People who paint life in such broad swaths miss out on nuance. For me, I didn't necessarily grasp what was happening in the moment. I did feel hindered by my perceptions of what my HS, now college, classmates would think of me if I stepped out in new and different ways. And it was complicated because I felt terribly lucky to even be in college, a first gen kid, so that was an additional burden I carried as I made my way through school. Grad school for me was probably like what many experience for college, but that came later in life.
You're making sarcastic comments about "not realizing", and then state how you "didn't necessarily grasp what was happening in the moment".
You seem rather clueless about yourself still.
Anonymous wrote:I can understand this. I wanted to go away and have 0 of my high school classmates at my college. And I loved high school and had lots of friends!
The other problem with instate is that even if the other kids aren't from your high school, they're still mostly from your state. It may be a big school, but it feels similar enough to high school.