Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It’s an overpriced schooling Boston. There are many better options.
Do you also say BC and Georgetown are overpriced?
Anonymous wrote:It’s an overpriced schooling Boston. There are many better options.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I think it’s a stretch to say Tufts isn’t respected. That said, it seems like it is never anyone’s actual first choice. I certainly wouldn’t pay anywhere near sticker price for it.
Tufts has a great engineering school.
I thought people in the DMV area were supposed to be so intelligent?
Compared to other engineering schools with that sticker price? I though engineers were supposed to be intelligent
Do you seriously think all schools in the same price range are the same level of difficulty to get in?
Separately, have you ever tried being admitted to Tufts, or know anything more than what you Google?
Seriously, why are people here so helpless?
Anonymous wrote:It’s an overpriced schooling Boston. There are many better options.
Anonymous wrote:I’m pretty sure academics is good enough but visited the campus and not that impressed.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It's a great 2nd tier option in Boston area as well as BU, BC, NU after the 1st tier MIT and Harvard.
And yet, if it were in any other city, it would be a first tier option. As such, it is a first tier school surrounded by other fabulous schools.
And stop trying to make NU happen. They have gamed the system more than any other north american institution.
Look, we are sorry (not really) that Northeastern rejected you in 1990 and in 2020, but posting your ire on DCUM (19 posts in 3 weeks!!) will change nothing. Take your toys and go home.
in 1990, Northeaster was a barely viable commuter school with a decent hockey team.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I think it’s a stretch to say Tufts isn’t respected. That said, it seems like it is never anyone’s actual first choice. I certainly wouldn’t pay anywhere near sticker price for it.
Tufts has a great engineering school.
I thought people in the DMV area were supposed to be so intelligent?
Compared to other engineering schools with that sticker price? I though engineers were supposed to be intelligent
Do you seriously think all schools in the same price range are the same level of difficulty to get in?
Separately, have you ever tried being admitted to Tufts, or know anything more than what you Google?
Seriously, why are people here so helpless?
Anonymous wrote:somehow the "like American" is near DC got cut from my post above
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It's a great 2nd tier option in Boston area as well as BU, BC, NU after the 1st tier MIT and Harvard.
And yet, if it were in any other city, it would be a first tier option. As such, it is a first tier school surrounded by other fabulous schools.
And stop trying to make NU happen. They have gamed the system more than any other north american institution.
Look, we are sorry (not really) that Northeastern rejected you in 1990 and in 2020, but posting your ire on DCUM (19 posts in 3 weeks!!) will change nothing. Take your toys and go home.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I think it’s a stretch to say Tufts isn’t respected. That said, it seems like it is never anyone’s actual first choice. I certainly wouldn’t pay anywhere near sticker price for it.
Tufts has a great engineering school.
I thought people in the DMV area were supposed to be so intelligent?
Compared to other engineering schools with that sticker price? I though engineers were supposed to be intelligent
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Because it's an over priced rich kid school?
Is it so bad if it has a high % of UMC students? The class is still highly qualified.
Those rich kids pay for the poor kids, but OP is too stupid to know that.
Somehow the most academically respected schools in the country manage to be need blind. Most manage to be full need met. The very best are full need met without loans. It's hard to take a school that need full tuition students badly enough to be need aware when all of the schools they want to be compare themselves to are need blind
I’m not understanding how this relates to the quality of education and perception of the school though. I can see the socioeconomic diversity argument in that being in a bubble of U/UMC kids might be limiting, but what else?
The better schools in the NESAC are need blind, the better schools in Boston are need blind. It's just another thing that the really elite schools all have in common.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Because it's an over priced rich kid school?
Is it so bad if it has a high % of UMC students? The class is still highly qualified.
Those rich kids pay for the poor kids, but OP is too stupid to know that.
Somehow the most academically respected schools in the country manage to be need blind. Most manage to be full need met. The very best are full need met without loans. It's hard to take a school that need full tuition students badly enough to be need aware when all of the schools they want to be compare themselves to are need blind
I’m not understanding how this relates to the quality of education and perception of the school though. I can see the socioeconomic diversity argument in that being in a bubble of U/UMC kids might be limiting, but what else?
The better schools in the NESAC are need blind, the better schools in Boston are need blind. It's just another thing that the really elite schools all have in common.
Anonymous wrote:Tufts has an increasing number of students each year applying ED so it is a lot of students first choice nowadays (same could be said for many other colleges- respected and disrespected ones, haha). I agree Tufts isn’t as respected as imo it “should” be on dcum, but having grown up in NY it is very well regarded there, so maybe some is geography? I tend to think of it lumped with Emory ad Wash U, but I realize both of those are ranked higher on USNWR than Tufts. I don’t understand why they are, but they are. At my kids’s W high schoo, the exact same caliber of students apply to all three (and yes all tend to be wealthy but that doesn’t mean they aren’t smart and well qualified).