Anonymous wrote:Congrats to your daughter.
Can't go wrong here. All just fit.
Would be nice to try something out of DC. I wouldn't rule out NU. People love that school.
The south is more appearance focused. That's just reality. But lived in Nashville for a year and it's a fun scene.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I am a lawyer with three kids at Ivies (not HYP). They all want to go to law school and two are currently studying for the LSAT. My gut tells me, based on what I know of the three schools, go with Georgetown. One of mine tried to transfer to Gtown and didn't get in (was WL). She is at an Ivy now. Odd how it works. But I think the curriculum lends itself to better success in law school. It is almost like a super SLAC, Georgetown is, for Arts and Sciences. Northewestern and Vandy will train well but I believe Gtown trains better critical thinking.
Note her grades have to be top top as she well knows for a t14.
Importantly, Gtown has a junior year program for law school and it is only open to it's own undergrads (unlike Harvard and Columbia) which have opened it up to all schools. That too me is the kicker/tiebreaker. It is called the Early Assurance Program at the Law School.
The above poster wrote: Georgetown "is almost like a super SLAC..I believe Gtown trains better critical thinking."
Hard to take this post seriously. Among the three, Georgetown is the least "like a super SLAC" due to larger class sizes than those at either of the other two universities under consideration. Northwestern is most like a super SLAC due to its high number of classes with fewer than 20 students.
Georgetown's endowment is small compared to that of Northwestern and compared to its peer schools.
As of June 30, 2022:
Northwestern University endowment = $14.1 Billion;
Vanderbilt University endowment = $10.2 Billion;
Georgetown University endowment = $3.21 Billion.
A possible reason that the above poster's child was rejected as a transfer student to Georgetown may have been due to a request for need based financial aid. Georgetown has the lowest endowment among the top 20 schools, while Northwestern's endowment ranks among the top 10 among all 800 US colleges and universities which report their endowments.
Georgetown's prestige comes from its Wash DC location and its School of Foreign Service.
Anonymous wrote:Thank you.
Yes. she's fortunate to have great choices and is a very good student. To put it into context, she got into only one school when she applied her senior year in HS. It's just cruelly competitive for kids applying from the DMV area in the regular applicant pools.
Anonymous wrote:I am a lawyer with three kids at Ivies (not HYP). They all want to go to law school and two are currently studying for the LSAT. My gut tells me, based on what I know of the three schools, go with Georgetown. One of mine tried to transfer to Gtown and didn't get in (was WL). She is at an Ivy now. Odd how it works. But I think the curriculum lends itself to better success in law school. It is almost like a super SLAC, Georgetown is, for Arts and Sciences. Northewestern and Vandy will train well but I believe Gtown trains better critical thinking.
Note her grades have to be top top as she well knows for a t14.
Importantly, Gtown has a junior year program for law school and it is only open to it's own undergrads (unlike Harvard and Columbia) which have opened it up to all schools. That too me is the kicker/tiebreaker. It is called the Early Assurance Program at the Law School.
Anonymous wrote:My order of preference would be Vandy then Gtown.
This has nothing to do with law school or big law - I did both just like you. All you need to get in is high grades + top LSAT - none of these schools hurt your chances. If you’re from DC, good chance she ends up at an east coast T14 and then NYC/DC big law. You know how regimented the path is, so why not take 3 yrs now to LIVE. Experience another part of the country, explore a new city. Who knows Vandy undergrad is just the kind of connection that opens up another city for her and lets her be a 6th Cir clerk one day or Nashville merely serves as her happy place in life that she travels to occasionally? As I plodded along the biglaw path and now govt, I understand how few chances one has in life to experience other cities etc - if it were my kid I’d push Vandy.
Anonymous wrote:We are a local DC family with a kid at Georgetown. We treat it like they are in a different city and never see them.
They have had a great academic and social experience thus far, zero complaints. Even the crappy dorm was a badge of honor for the dorm mates.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP: Why are you posting this? Your daughter should be encouraged to make her own decision. Based on working many years with undergraduates I can tell you you are doing your daughter a grave injustice based on where you are coming from. Based on my experience, you have no capacity to understand this.
The biggest age of self discovery are the years of an undergraduate. Your daughter is clearly telling you she wants xyz and you think you are doing the best to facilitate this. It is detrimental to her happiness and success to get out from under your influence, however well intended. The best thing you can do for your child is let her go figure it out. STOP doing YOUR research and influencing your child. Time to step back. She sounds brilliant and is at a point in her life where pleasing her parents is a guarantee for failure. If you live in the DC area insist she NOT go to GU.
This is a massive turning point in her life….and yours. Encourage physical distance from home in an environment where she can discover new things. Let her grow up.
That was incredibly unhelpful.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP: Why are you posting this? Your daughter should be encouraged to make her own decision. Based on working many years with undergraduates I can tell you you are doing your daughter a grave injustice based on where you are coming from. Based on my experience, you have no capacity to understand this.
The biggest age of self discovery are the years of an undergraduate. Your daughter is clearly telling you she wants xyz and you think you are doing the best to facilitate this. It is detrimental to her happiness and success to get out from under your influence, however well intended. The best thing you can do for your child is let her go figure it out. STOP doing YOUR research and influencing your child. Time to step back. She sounds brilliant and is at a point in her life where pleasing her parents is a guarantee for failure. If you live in the DC area insist she NOT go to GU.
This is a massive turning point in her life….and yours. Encourage physical distance from home in an environment where she can discover new things. Let her grow up.
That was incredibly unhelpful.