Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Vanderbilt is an extremely selective college with a particularly good reputation for premed and biological sciences. It is $90,000/year. 90% of people on DCUM posters would give their left arm to get their kid accepted there.
Most posters here wouldn’t or can’t afford to spend $90,000/year for an undergraduate degree that would require further and even more expensive schooling.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Vanderbilt is an extremely selective college with a particularly good reputation for premed and biological sciences. It is $90,000/year. 90% of people on DCUM posters would give their left arm to get their kid accepted there.
Most posters here wouldn’t or can’t afford to spend $90,000/year for an undergraduate degree that would require further and even more expensive schooling.
Anonymous wrote:Vanderbilt is an extremely selective college with a particularly good reputation for premed and biological sciences. It is $90,000/year. 90% of people on DCUM posters would give their left arm to get their kid accepted there.
Anonymous wrote:Why is Cornell considered the bottom ivy if Dartmouth is ranked lower by USNews and also internationally? Cornell is higher regarded for tech jobs than most ivies. Finance/consulting that are sought after but the work hours are terrible and many get burned out.
Anonymous wrote:Top 20 schools are nearly impossible to get into for ‘regular’ smart kids. Even so, they cost $80-$90k per year, so they are not on my radar. That includes Vanderbilt. Why waste time talking about impossible schools?
Anonymous wrote:I’ve mentioned this in other threads, I have a junior at Vanderbilt and am not impressed by the outcomes compared to peer schools.
We know too many students without internships. My DC had a great freshman internship which helped set the stage and has a decent one this summer (good, not great) but I notice that others who did not get that freshman internship are struggling to catch up.
To pay astronomical tuition for extremely weak career services and outcomes is worrisome.
My DC is in Greek life but I have never heard of any Friday clothing thing. There’s a lot of misinformation on this thread regarding Greek life, housing, business undergrad, etc.
Anonymous wrote:Pre-covid Vanerbilt's average SAT was top 5 in the country. SAT has proven to be predicative of college success. Vanderbilt students are very bright, very motivated. Many here have children who were denied admission to Vanderbilt. First we see with UChicago, WashU, NEU, UVA. Parents don't know why children getting rejected so they lash out.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Vandy has odd exit success vs their ranking
I know a handful of underemployed vandy grads
They are attractive tho!
Plenty of southern girls go to Vandy for their Mrs.
Anonymous wrote:I’ve mentioned this in other threads, I have a junior at Vanderbilt and am not impressed by the outcomes compared to peer schools.
We know too many students without internships. My DC had a great freshman internship which helped set the stage and has a decent one this summer (good, not great) but I notice that others who did not get that freshman internship are struggling to catch up.
To pay astronomical tuition for extremely weak career services and outcomes is worrisome.
My DC is in Greek life but I have never heard of any Friday clothing thing. There’s a lot of misinformation on this thread regarding Greek life, housing, business undergrad, etc.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Vandy has odd exit success vs their ranking
I know a handful of underemployed vandy grads
They are attractive tho!
Plenty of southern girls go to Vandy for their Mrs.
Anonymous wrote:Vandy has odd exit success vs their ranking
I know a handful of underemployed vandy grads
They are attractive tho!