Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This thread is so DCUM. 🙄
I have an oldest at a “hand-holding” SLAC and it’s a great fit for my oldest. I visited Drexel for my other kid and it seems like a fantastic school! I’m a pretty anxious person and I was not uncomfortable at all. I thought Philadelphia was a really cool city with lots to offer. OP, you should check it out and talk to students there.
Did you actually walk around "the campus"? we did. DD was apprehensive and afraid. never applied.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This thread is so DCUM. 🙄
I have an oldest at a “hand-holding” SLAC and it’s a great fit for my oldest. I visited Drexel for my other kid and it seems like a fantastic school! I’m a pretty anxious person and I was not uncomfortable at all. I thought Philadelphia was a really cool city with lots to offer. OP, you should check it out and talk to students there.
Did you actually walk around "the campus"? we did. DD was apprehensive and afraid. never applied.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I'm pasting just one paragraph that I 100% agree with. Drexel isn't for everybody, but it has a lot to offer:
My suggestion is that, if your child wants a coop, likes STEM or design, and wants to be in a youth- focused, dynamic city that is only two hours away (and about three blocks from Amtrak), then Drexel is a great choice. At this point, if that was my child, I'd pick Drexel over Northeastern.
Just like my kid chose Northeastern over MIT
You already said that a few pages ago, so odd.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We just toured Drexel and were very impressed. Didn't feel any less safe than any urban school and they have a lot of those blue light safety kiosks around the area and kids can call a security guard to walk them home or anywhere they need to go within the area at any time. You can also co-op anywhere in the world so if you want to try another city, you can. We looked at it thinking of a backup safety school and left thinking it could actually be a really good fit for our kid. Plus a quick train ride to DC or NYC which our kids loved.
Yes, but doesn’t it end up taking six years to graduate with the co-ops? Yes, they get paid but college expenses go up as well. Did they address average time to degree completion with you?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I'm pasting just one paragraph that I 100% agree with. Drexel isn't for everybody, but it has a lot to offer:
My suggestion is that, if your child wants a coop, likes STEM or design, and wants to be in a youth- focused, dynamic city that is only two hours away (and about three blocks from Amtrak), then Drexel is a great choice. At this point, if that was my child, I'd pick Drexel over Northeastern.
Just like my kid chose Northeastern over MIT
Anonymous wrote:I'm pasting just one paragraph that I 100% agree with. Drexel isn't for everybody, but it has a lot to offer:
My suggestion is that, if your child wants a coop, likes STEM or design, and wants to be in a youth- focused, dynamic city that is only two hours away (and about three blocks from Amtrak), then Drexel is a great choice. At this point, if that was my child, I'd pick Drexel over Northeastern.
Anonymous wrote:We just toured Drexel and were very impressed. Didn't feel any less safe than any urban school and they have a lot of those blue light safety kiosks around the area and kids can call a security guard to walk them home or anywhere they need to go within the area at any time. You can also co-op anywhere in the world so if you want to try another city, you can. We looked at it thinking of a backup safety school and left thinking it could actually be a really good fit for our kid. Plus a quick train ride to DC or NYC which our kids loved.
Anonymous wrote:We just toured Drexel and were very impressed. Didn't feel any less safe than any urban school and they have a lot of those blue light safety kiosks around the area and kids can call a security guard to walk them home or anywhere they need to go within the area at any time. You can also co-op anywhere in the world so if you want to try another city, you can. We looked at it thinking of a backup safety school and left thinking it could actually be a really good fit for our kid. Plus a quick train ride to DC or NYC which our kids loved.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This thread is so DCUM. 🙄
I have an oldest at a “hand-holding” SLAC and it’s a great fit for my oldest. I visited Drexel for my other kid and it seems like a fantastic school! I’m a pretty anxious person and I was not uncomfortable at all. I thought Philadelphia was a really cool city with lots to offer. OP, you should check it out and talk to students there.
Did you actually walk around "the campus"? we did. DD was apprehensive and afraid. never applied.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Ds wants to apply to the business school. He has a 3.79 gpa. He likes the co-op program they offer. Is Philadelphia safe?
A friend of mine went to grad school there. He lived near where the Move group did and when all that was going down.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Ds wants to apply to the business school. He has a 3.79 gpa. He likes the co-op program they offer. Is Philadelphia safe?
A friend of mine went to grad school there. He lived near where the Move group did and when all that was going down.
Anonymous wrote:This thread is so DCUM. 🙄
I have an oldest at a “hand-holding” SLAC and it’s a great fit for my oldest. I visited Drexel for my other kid and it seems like a fantastic school! I’m a pretty anxious person and I was not uncomfortable at all. I thought Philadelphia was a really cool city with lots to offer. OP, you should check it out and talk to students there.