Anonymous wrote:The areas north (Roland Park) and west (Hampden) of the Homewood campus are OK. The areas east and south can be scary. More petty crime than violent crime.
I think that student life at JHU can be contained within the Homewood campus. Public transportation in the city is abysmal.
Having said that, I’d support my kids if either of them were seriously considering JHU for Peabody or a hard science field.
Anonymous wrote:Because it's in Baltimore. Lol.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Unsafe, cutthroat, nerdy environment are often used by people who can't get in or afford to pay.
That being said, DC is as safe as Baltimore.
My Humanities kid is at George Washington. He feels safe at GW, which has campus police everywhere. It's all clean and kept up, even though it's open concept and embedded in the city. Georgetown is enclosed and felt safe too when we visited.
Can anyone compare safety on those campuses compared to the Johns Hopkins campus?
The cities are set up differently. In DC you can steer clear of the highest crime neighborhoods. In Baltimore you have to drive through them to go to parties or the fun neighborhoods. Plus, it has a huge drug problem. Which leads to crime and violence.
I have lived in both cities.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Unsafe, cutthroat, nerdy environment are often used by people who can't get in or afford to pay.
That being said, DC is as safe as Baltimore.
My Humanities kid is at George Washington. He feels safe at GW, which has campus police everywhere. It's all clean and kept up, even though it's open concept and embedded in the city. Georgetown is enclosed and felt safe too when we visited.
Can anyone compare safety on those campuses compared to the Johns Hopkins campus?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Unsafe, cutthroat, nerdy environment are often used by people who can't get in or afford to pay.
That being said, DC is as safe as Baltimore.
My Humanities kid is at George Washington. He feels safe at GW, which has campus police everywhere. It's all clean and kept up, even though it's open concept and embedded in the city. Georgetown is enclosed and felt safe too when we visited.
Can anyone compare safety on those campuses compared to the Johns Hopkins campus?
Anonymous wrote:Because it is too hard and not for pansies. JHU is notorious for grade deflation, which is in contrast to schools like Harvard which has big grade deflation.
Look, most of these kids want to do garbage like consulting, banking, or some other finance. You need to get the best grades on paper for a degree that really doesn't matter. Those fields only care about the name on the paper and your gpa, so take the path of least resistance and go to the easiest schools possible.
JHU is HARD.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Top 10 school. Close to DC and far enough away at the same time. Who so little interest?
None of the fun college stuff. people who live near the school (neighbors) have said it's kind of sad. No party, etc even on Halloween, etc.. A reputation for smart kids but socially awkward maybe? Plus (superficial) kids/college applicants have said in forums that JHU students lack physical attractiveness across the board. Sad to hear and all likely untrue.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I was a little shocked that the freshman housing had a fenced off courtyard with a guard, and then you could use a key to get into your hallway. That seemed pretty high security to me. Also a lot of keys needed to enter library and general hallways. It’s more
Locked up than a rural campus.
This is the case at CMU.
Rural campuses, by definition, have no one around other than students, so no security needed. It's like not locking your door.