Anonymous wrote:
I'm familiar with the curriculum, but I don't know what you mean by a student needing structure. Open is just flexibility and gives the student freedom to explore. It's not like they're on their own without an advisor, right? I'd think most college students would find that really ne
I graduated from Brown over 20 years ago, so my experience may be outdated.
But yes, students are on their own. THey are assigned a freshman advisor, but that's it. I think we had to take a freshman seminar with them. But there was very much the culture of, if you need help, go seek it out. If you are a self starter, ambitious, extrovert, you can do OK.
There is NO curriculum, except what your concentration requires. There are no distribution requirements. And in most cases, prerequisites are flexible... if you think you can handle a class without the prerequisite, go ahead.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Girls tend to find spouses at college or through college friends. Who's your daughter going to meet at Michigan? Half the kids are middle class Michigan residents; the other half are kids that were rejected from Berkeley (California students), Brown, Penn and Cornell. 1/2 the boys are engineering or business (at Ross, a marketing school). Statistically, if your daughter meets her husband at Michigan, he's most likely going to be a future Ford engineer or mid-level manager at Kraft/Heinz.
At Brown a likely mate possessed the candle power (and/or $) to get into an Ivy, will be conditioned, respect culture, cosmopolitan, and post-grad will likely end up in finance, or a top tier law/medical school.
Different leagues.
What an ageist/sexist remark! I certainly didn't look for a husband at my SLAC nor at yale law school I was there to learn what I needed to do and excel. My message to both of my kids is that time spent dating in high school, college, is wasted time Focus on your studies and all will fall into place. Are you from the south? Seriously, no one thinks about MRS degrees anymore. And, finally, i wouldn't want my kid to marry anyone from Brown because I know that they got an ultra liberal chopped-up version of an education as opposed to the Great Books series at chicago or Columbia. Taking a bunch of isolated courses of your own pick does not an intellectual make.
I'm not talking about a marry at 22 stay-at-home southern belle MRS degree. But many spouses meet in college or something like reconnecting in your mid 20s with someone you first met welcome week. It happens frequently.
Anonymous wrote:Girls tend to find spouses at college or through college friends. Who's your daughter going to meet at Michigan? Half the kids are middle class Michigan residents; the other half are kids that were rejected from Berkeley (California students), Brown, Penn and Cornell. 1/2 the boys are engineering or business (at Ross, a marketing school). Statistically, if your daughter meets her husband at Michigan, he's most likely going to be a future Ford engineer or mid-level manager at Kraft/Heinz.
At Brown a likely mate possessed the candle power (and/or $) to get into an Ivy, will be conditioned, respect culture, cosmopolitan, and post-grad will likely end up in finance, or a top tier law/medical school.
Different leagues.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Nobody cares where you get your undergraduate degree. I'd tell her that I'd pay for a year of travel once she's done if she chooses the cheaper school. Hell, she'd learn more in that year than 4 years at either institution.
True but grad schools and Med schools do take it into account. And honestly, DD is scoffing at high school 2.0 now, but when she goes to college and feels like fish out water like all of us sometimes did, she has the option of reconnecting with her high school friends and shifting down into that easy state college, job in home town, hanging out with high school buddies until well past middle age mentality. Maybe OP is fine with that, but if she has potential and dreams to big things, it would be sad if she ends up at middle age and regrets taking the safe choice but has two kids and a job at GM.
Anonymous wrote:Nobody cares where you get your undergraduate degree.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:...regrets taking the safe choice but has two kids and a job at GM.
To be clear, I have some highly successful friends and family who work at the Big 3 automakers. Engineers that get into management can be in the $200,000-400,000 comp range. Comfortable life, obviously!
I am envious in some ways of my friends who stayed in my slow hometown region, went to state, and they have much nicer lifestyles than I can afford here in DC (partly b/c I didn't know how to really chase the money and a salary of $100k seemed like an ungodly amount of money). I would have been much happier to not have that lesson in COL economics, but I do know I would have been ultimately dissatisfied staying in that one place and at least trying to do more. Depends on what OP DD dreams are, and her temperament.
Anonymous wrote:Nobody cares where you get your undergraduate degree. I'd tell her that I'd pay for a year of travel once she's done if she chooses the cheaper school. Hell, she'd learn more in that year than 4 years at either institution.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:...regrets taking the safe choice but has two kids and a job at GM.
To be clear, I have some highly successful friends and family who work at the Big 3 automakers. Engineers that get into management can be in the $200,000-400,000 comp range. Comfortable life, obviously!
Anonymous wrote:Nobody cares where you get your undergraduate degree. I'd tell her that I'd pay for a year of travel once she's done if she chooses the cheaper school. Hell, she'd learn more in that year than 4 years at either institution.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Girls tend to find spouses at college or through college friends. Who's your daughter going to meet at Michigan? Half the kids are middle class Michigan residents; the other half are kids that were rejected from Berkeley (California students), Brown, Penn and Cornell. 1/2 the boys are engineering or business (at Ross, a marketing school). Statistically, if your daughter meets her husband at Michigan, he's most likely going to be a future Ford engineer or mid-level manager at Kraft/Heinz.
At Brown a likely mate possessed the candle power (and/or $) to get into an Ivy, will be conditioned, respect culture, cosmopolitan, and post-grad will likely end up in finance, or a top tier law/medical school.
Different leagues.
What an ageist/sexist remark! I certainly didn't look for a husband at my SLAC nor at yale law school I was there to learn what I needed to do and excel. My message to both of my kids is that time spent dating in high school, college, is wasted time Focus on your studies and all will fall into place. Are you from the south? Seriously, no one thinks about MRS degrees anymore. And, finally, i wouldn't want my kid to marry anyone from Brown because I know that they got an ultra liberal chopped-up version of an education as opposed to the Great Books series at chicago or Columbia. Taking a bunch of isolated courses of your own pick does not an intellectual make.
Anonymous wrote:to OP: Be sure to add in the calculations of costs associated with travel back and forth. That killed applying to west coast schools for us. We just couldn't afford to pay for multiple air tickets repeatedly over four or five years. We, too, went state and DD is thrilled.