Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Northwestern! The interdisciplinary focus of the student body makes for a great undergrad culture. Proximity to Chicago offers great internship options and students can take advantage of all the rich cultural programming the city has to offer.
+1
and Chicago Field Studies!
Anonymous wrote:Preferences are very subjective and kid-dependent. Of that list, my kid only applied to 2 (penn amd duke). My kid had zero interest in schools on the quarter system like northwestern, Chicago core requirements weren't a great fit, Rice - didn't like the residential college house system and didn't feel a fit socially at all. Duke is very popular and has good sports and school spirit, but Penn had the best academic and social fit for my kid so that's what they chose. Great energy. Classes/profs have been really good. Kid always gets the classes they want. Lots of resources. So much to do on campus, in Philly, and easy access to nyc for social, networking and interview opportunities. Really an ideal place.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Caveat: please put rankings and prestige aside, so forget about Ivy label for this thread. Just which do YOU think seems best based on personal experience, your research, colleagues you work with, anecdotal grad school and career outcomes, etc.
Penn, no question.
We have family and close friends currently at all four, two of them we have two different family members attending.
Duke is the least serious academically of the four and not a great fit for the true academics.
Chicago used to be that place, but they are watereed down now because they do not get many top-top kids anymore. It is a great school but it lost its academic-power house edge about 10 yrs ago.
Northwestern has a super intellectual feel but unfortunately cutthroat compared to the others, and a significant negative social life.
All four are preprofessional, as are other T10/ivy, with Northwestern the worst of the four. Penn and Chicago are the least pre-professional and the most collaborative of the four.
Penn faculty connections and outcomes are the best of the four by a lot, as which makes getting internships, grad school, on campus research the best of the four. Chicago is second for this, of these four.
Penn has the best on campus recruiting by top companies, of the four, not sure who is second but the other three are below Penn.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Penn not even a question
There really aren't a lot of people in 2026 celebrating undergrad culture at Penn.
You do not have a student there and students at one or more of the other places. Duke's frats are off campus or out in fields. Chicago and Penn have the most on campus accessible parties to all
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Rice & Duke
Because of grade inflation?
because of premed and prelaw advising
Do you seriously think Penn and Northwestern do not have top notch premed / prelaw advising?
their match rates are not as high
Anonymous wrote:we just went through this deciding . Duke has the least grade deflation-except for Rice, it has the best pre med and pre law advising and highest law/med school entrance
NU had the best vibe and location
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Penn not even a question
There really aren't a lot of people in 2026 celebrating undergrad culture at Penn.
Anonymous wrote:we just went through this deciding . Duke has the least grade deflation-except for Rice, it has the best pre med and pre law advising and highest law/med school entrance
NU had the best vibe and location
Anonymous wrote:Northwestern! The interdisciplinary focus of the student body makes for a great undergrad culture. Proximity to Chicago offers great internship options and students can take advantage of all the rich cultural programming the city has to offer.
Anonymous wrote:Caveat: please put rankings and prestige aside, so forget about Ivy label for this thread. Just which do YOU think seems best based on personal experience, your research, colleagues you work with, anecdotal grad school and career outcomes, etc.