Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What's nerve wracking for you? The distance to London or that you fear the city in some way? What are your concerns?
Distance. The terror threat is just a way of life now for major cities; I'm fine with London for safety.
That makes no sense. It is no farther to London from DC than most of California.
She's applying to college in LA (only about 3 hours by plane).
Anonymous wrote:You can say no if you think it's indulgent. You can't say no because of your preference or how it makes you feel.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:PP here.
I forgot about 6.
6. Be careful about the value of British university degrees in the US. I cannot tell you what kind of impact it may have. It may hurt, it may not hurt, it may even help with the right employer. But if she already plans to go straight to graduate school, then this is a moot concern.
NP here. I agree with PP -- everyone in this area knows Harvard, UVA and W&M, but St. Andrews and the other Scottish schools are not as well known to some employers. Moreover, when it comes to networking, it may be difficult to coordinate calls and interviews with the US due to time differences, among other things, not to mention flying back and forth for in-person interviews!
I say this as an American who was dead-set on studying in Europe for college and ended up at a well-known SLAC.
Anonymous wrote:PP here.
I forgot about 6.
6. Be careful about the value of British university degrees in the US. I cannot tell you what kind of impact it may have. It may hurt, it may not hurt, it may even help with the right employer. But if she already plans to go straight to graduate school, then this is a moot concern.
Anonymous wrote:I lived in London and attended classes there for a year and loved it. Be prepared for the cost though. Very expensive!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:10:47's post is right on. My DS really wanted to go to school in London and was sure his major would be biology.
He ended up not going to the UK for lots of reasons. He just finished his first semester at a US SLAC and wants nothing to do with biology ever again.
A UK university is not the place you go to "find yourself." You have to go in a particular program.
DC has several friends in the UK who ended up not really liking their course of study but it's very difficult to switch. On the plus side, most of them don't seem to have jobs that have anything to do with their "major". Many grads go on the "grad schemes" which are basically job training programs.