Anonymous wrote:GW is where rich people send their kids who didn't get into Ivies.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:GWU benefits from its location, pure and simple. If she is coming all the way to DC to get a DC experience, there is no other school to consider -- even Georgetown. Georgetown and AU are fine schools in lovely neighborhoods, but is that why she would move almost 3000 miles to a city where careers are based on connections and moving-and-shaking? Heck, if she wants to be in a lovely neighborhood outside of the action she should be looking at Pepperdine and Northwestern.
This is a really odd and misinformed comment. Being within walking distance of the State Dept (GW) does not give a school an advantage over one that is within metro distance (AU).
Maybe odd, but not misinformed. I knew Lloyd Elliot well before they named my school after him. GW is central; the others are not. You are a short walk to State, sure, but also to the IMF, World Bank, the IDB, Interior, K Street, the Fed, OAS, OEOB, etc. If a GW grad doesn’t have a strong resume by graduation, it was by choice. The IMF and World Bank are a block from the freshman dorm.
proximity =/= getting hired. I'm an AU grad and I know many other AU grads at the World Bank (I've been there 20+ years). I know only a couple of GW grads. Keep in mind, I'm not talking about undergraduates but graduate students
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:GWU benefits from its location, pure and simple. If she is coming all the way to DC to get a DC experience, there is no other school to consider -- even Georgetown. Georgetown and AU are fine schools in lovely neighborhoods, but is that why she would move almost 3000 miles to a city where careers are based on connections and moving-and-shaking? Heck, if she wants to be in a lovely neighborhood outside of the action she should be looking at Pepperdine and Northwestern.
This is a really odd and misinformed comment. Being within walking distance of the State Dept (GW) does not give a school an advantage over one that is within metro distance (AU).
Maybe odd, but not misinformed. I knew Lloyd Elliot well before they named my school after him. GW is central; the others are not. You are a short walk to State, sure, but also to the IMF, World Bank, the IDB, Interior, K Street, the Fed, OAS, OEOB, etc. If a GW grad doesn’t have a strong resume by graduation, it was by choice. The IMF and World Bank are a block from the freshman dorm.
Anonymous wrote:GW is better known. My company hired lots from GW but only a few from AU.
Anonymous wrote:Both mediocre schools. Good luck!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:GWU benefits from its location, pure and simple. If she is coming all the way to DC to get a DC experience, there is no other school to consider -- even Georgetown. Georgetown and AU are fine schools in lovely neighborhoods, but is that why she would move almost 3000 miles to a city where careers are based on connections and moving-and-shaking? Heck, if she wants to be in a lovely neighborhood outside of the action she should be looking at Pepperdine and Northwestern.
This is a really odd and misinformed comment. Being within walking distance of the State Dept (GW) does not give a school an advantage over one that is within metro distance (AU).
Anonymous wrote:GWU benefits from its location, pure and simple. If she is coming all the way to DC to get a DC experience, there is no other school to consider -- even Georgetown. Georgetown and AU are fine schools in lovely neighborhoods, but is that why she would move almost 3000 miles to a city where careers are based on connections and moving-and-shaking? Heck, if she wants to be in a lovely neighborhood outside of the action she should be looking at Pepperdine and Northwestern.
Anonymous wrote:Can someone please compare these two colleges? My child is interested in attending college in DC. We live in Washington state (stumbled upon this site by accident via Googling something and have stayed ever since) but not sure exactly their reputations, what kind of student does best at each, etc. She is interested in (perhaps obviously!) things like international affairs, political science, etc.
Thanks!