Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This is unfortunately what happens when students and families chase prestige instead of fit. Chicago is an excellent school for the right kid. It has always been a bit of a niche school because it leans so intellectual, it’s current emphasis on marketing hasn’t changed that.
True. It is also what happens when grubby colleges juke the rankings and get placed amongst the crème de la crème elites, when they are not even offering a top 30 ethos or outcomes. For years the boosters spin UChicago's graduation surveys and salary outcomes and make every excuse in the book, when the reality is it is clearly just not an elite undergraduate college. The data makes that very clear.
Anonymous wrote:This is unfortunately what happens when students and families chase prestige instead of fit. Chicago is an excellent school for the right kid. It has always been a bit of a niche school because it leans so intellectual, it’s current emphasis on marketing hasn’t changed that.
Anonymous wrote:This is unfortunately what happens when students and families chase prestige instead of fit. Chicago is an excellent school for the right kid. It has always been a bit of a niche school because it leans so intellectual, it’s current emphasis on marketing hasn’t changed that.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I am waiting to see how many kids who got into high profile college from DD's class find out they hate the school (or can't keep up) and decide to transfer after the first year. These places all look great on paper, but you get the real vibe once you are there, I guess.
U of Chicago certainly isn't in the middle of nowhere.
Campus is in the middle of nowhere to millions who live in Chicago who literally NEVER venture down there. No reason to, there’s nothing there. So of course it’s in the middle of nowhere to wealthy teens from the coasts, especially when most of their friends are at colleges clustered on the costs. Just getting to the airport from campus is a two hour affair.
It's a half hour drive. I think there's even a school shuttle, but it's a half hour in an uber. If you're talking public transportation, then a hell of a lot of colleges are a 2 hour public bus ride from the airport. I live in NYC and NYU or Columbia could easily be a 2 hour bus ride from an airport.
I feel like you people have never been to chicago?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:She earned very high marks and she does not wish to return. And not just for known reasons like violent crime, weather, and its isolated location in the Midwest, and more specifically, on the deep south side of Chicago. We had a long lunch and here are her words in quotes: Her classmates are "repulsively obnoxious" and "insufferable," her professors were "checked out" or "barely spoke English," the university seems "unprofessional" and in "disarray," and most of the staff she encountered were "useless" and "incompetent." "It looks like a serious university but it does not operate like a serious university."
It was not her first choice but she was so excited when we met for lunch late last summer. It is sad to see her so unhappy after a year.
You realize it is hard to take you seriously when you lead with “the violent crime” and the “isolated location”.
First, the area around the school has crime, but the school itself is fine.
2nd… a city of 5 million people is hardly an isolated location.
Why even mention those two points…doesn’t sound like they had anything to do with your niece liking or not liking the school.
The location, weather, and crime is why the campus ethos is lacking, from faculty and administrators to low-level staff. If you were a high-flying researcher or administrator, would you prefer the coasts, the warm Sun Belt — or south side Chicago crime and cold weather? If you were a nurse or a random service worker, would you want to work downtown or the wealthy north and western suburbs of Chicago (for more pay!) — or commute down to the dangerous and isolated south side Chicago island the campus is in?
honestly LOL
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I am waiting to see how many kids who got into high profile college from DD's class find out they hate the school (or can't keep up) and decide to transfer after the first year. These places all look great on paper, but you get the real vibe once you are there, I guess.
U of Chicago certainly isn't in the middle of nowhere.
Campus is in the middle of nowhere to millions who live in Chicago who literally NEVER venture down there. No reason to, there’s nothing there. So of course it’s in the middle of nowhere to wealthy teens from the coasts, especially when most of their friends are at colleges clustered on the costs. Just getting to the airport from campus is a two hour affair.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:She earned very high marks and she does not wish to return. And not just for known reasons like violent crime, weather, and its isolated location in the Midwest, and more specifically, on the deep south side of Chicago. We had a long lunch and here are her words in quotes: Her classmates are "repulsively obnoxious" and "insufferable," her professors were "checked out" or "barely spoke English," the university seems "unprofessional" and in "disarray," and most of the staff she encountered were "useless" and "incompetent." "It looks like a serious university but it does not operate like a serious university."
It was not her first choice but she was so excited when we met for lunch late last summer. It is sad to see her so unhappy after a year.
You realize it is hard to take you seriously when you lead with “the violent crime” and the “isolated location”.
First, the area around the school has crime, but the school itself is fine.
2nd… a city of 5 million people is hardly an isolated location.
Why even mention those two points…doesn’t sound like they had anything to do with your niece liking or not liking the school.
The location, weather, and crime is why the campus ethos is lacking, from faculty and administrators to low-level staff. If you were a high-flying researcher or administrator, would you prefer the coasts, the warm Sun Belt — or south side Chicago crime and cold weather? If you were a nurse or a random service worker, would you want to work downtown or the wealthy north and western suburbs of Chicago (for more pay!) — or commute down to the dangerous and isolated south side Chicago island the campus is in?
Anonymous wrote:She earned very high marks and she does not wish to return. And not just for known reasons like violent crime, weather, and its isolated location in the Midwest, and more specifically, on the deep south side of Chicago. We had a long lunch and here are her words in quotes: Her classmates are "repulsively obnoxious" and "insufferable," her professors were "checked out" or "barely spoke English," the university seems "unprofessional" and in "disarray," and most of the staff she encountered were "useless" and "incompetent." "It looks like a serious university but it does not operate like a serious university."
It was not her first choice but she was so excited when we met for lunch late last summer. It is sad to see her so unhappy after a year.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I am waiting to see how many kids who got into high profile college from DD's class find out they hate the school (or can't keep up) and decide to transfer after the first year. These places all look great on paper, but you get the real vibe once you are there, I guess.
U of Chicago certainly isn't in the middle of nowhere.
Campus is in the middle of nowhere to millions who live in Chicago who literally NEVER venture down there. No reason to, there’s nothing there. So of course it’s in the middle of nowhere to wealthy teens from the coasts, especially when most of their friends are at colleges clustered on the costs. Just getting to the airport from campus is a two hour affair.