Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It isn’t always worth it for a family to put a huge stress on their finances for an impressive school. UVA produces very successful students and was likely much cheaper. I get it. The Ivy brand isn’t necessarily a good purchase if you, say, hurt your retirement.
UVA is barely top 25 and they are very weak in STEM and CS. It doesn’t attract top students.
Wrong. UVa attracts plenty of top students. My kid being one. Echols scholar. Top stats, valedictorian of very large public, long-term strong ECs/volunteering, niche sport (& captain), part-time job, orchestra, and more. Solid all around and extremely likable. Kid is very happy at UVa.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It isn’t always worth it for a family to put a huge stress on their finances for an impressive school. UVA produces very successful students and was likely much cheaper. I get it. The Ivy brand isn’t necessarily a good purchase if you, say, hurt your retirement.
UVA is barely top 25 and they are very weak in STEM and CS. It doesn’t attract top students.
Not that ranking means all that much, but USNWR has Harvard at number 17 and UVA at number 36 for computer science.
There are far more important criteria to go by than the marginal difference in the program rankings of these two very highly rated universities.
Harvard graduates working in technology make considerably more according to the WSJ.
probably due to connections, not because they are better or smarter
i dont know if they are smarter but they definitely have way more connections for sure
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Harvard is expensive
Not everyone likes Harvard or feel it is a fit for them
UVA is a great school
One data point does not make a trend or norm
Then why did this person apply to Harvard ?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Harvard is expensive
Not everyone likes Harvard or feel it is a fit for them
UVA is a great school
One data point does not make a trend or norm
Then why did this person apply to Harvard ?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It isn’t always worth it for a family to put a huge stress on their finances for an impressive school. UVA produces very successful students and was likely much cheaper. I get it. The Ivy brand isn’t necessarily a good purchase if you, say, hurt your retirement.
UVA is barely top 25 and they are very weak in STEM and CS. It doesn’t attract top students.
Not that ranking means all that much, but USNWR has Harvard at number 17 and UVA at number 36 for computer science.
There are far more important criteria to go by than the marginal difference in the program rankings of these two very highly rated universities.
Harvard graduates working in technology make considerably more according to the WSJ.
probably due to connections, not because they are better or smarter
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It isn’t always worth it for a family to put a huge stress on their finances for an impressive school. UVA produces very successful students and was likely much cheaper. I get it. The Ivy brand isn’t necessarily a good purchase if you, say, hurt your retirement.
UVA is barely top 25 and they are very weak in STEM and CS. It doesn’t attract top students.
Wrong. UVa attracts plenty of top students. My kid being one. Echols scholar. Top stats, valedictorian of very large public, long-term strong ECs/volunteering, niche sport (& captain), part-time job, orchestra, and more. Solid all around and extremely likable. Kid is very happy at UVa.
Anonymous wrote:Because you think employers are idiots? It's the same kid.Anonymous wrote:I don't think the same kid coming out of UVA vs Harvard is getting the same job offers. Not even close.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It isn’t always worth it for a family to put a huge stress on their finances for an impressive school. UVA produces very successful students and was likely much cheaper. I get it. The Ivy brand isn’t necessarily a good purchase if you, say, hurt your retirement.
UVA is barely top 25 and they are very weak in STEM and CS. It doesn’t attract top students.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It isn’t always worth it for a family to put a huge stress on their finances for an impressive school. UVA produces very successful students and was likely much cheaper. I get it. The Ivy brand isn’t necessarily a good purchase if you, say, hurt your retirement.
UVA is barely top 25 and they are very weak in STEM and CS. It doesn’t attract top students.
Not that ranking means all that much, but USNWR has Harvard at number 17 and UVA at number 36 for computer science.
There are far more important criteria to go by than the marginal difference in the program rankings of these two very highly rated universities.
Harvard graduates working in technology make considerably more according to the WSJ.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It isn’t always worth it for a family to put a huge stress on their finances for an impressive school. UVA produces very successful students and was likely much cheaper. I get it. The Ivy brand isn’t necessarily a good purchase if you, say, hurt your retirement.
UVA is barely top 25 and they are very weak in STEM and CS. It doesn’t attract top students.
Not that ranking means all that much, but USNWR has Harvard at number 17 and UVA at number 36 for computer science.
There are far more important criteria to go by than the marginal difference in the program rankings of these two very highly rated universities.
Anonymous wrote:My friend's DD (in New York) is the valedictorian of her class and heading to SUNY Binghamton.
My friend's snobby brother (who went to elite colleges) and SIL (who did not)- have much younger kids and have no idea how college admissions works these days - and have made a ton of rude comments about this to my friend. I feel so bad for her because she's a single mom, she's proud she can make Bing work, she thinks it's a fab school, and her DD is seriously thinking about med school, too. But it's like her family is telling her she's a failure because look, DD worked so hard to be graduating #1 and you are sending her to a state school.
I think Binghamton is a great choice but snobs be snobbin'.
Anonymous wrote:Is this fairly common at public schools?
One kid at my child’s public just turned down Harvard for UVA. I can understand not choosing NYU or Georgetown for UVA, but Harvard???
Anonymous wrote:I did that. Not quite Harvard, but turned down Duke, Cornell, and Dartmouth engineering to go to UMD. It was the decision between graduating debt free or $100k+ in debt.
Ironically at my first job my cube mate came from Yale, so I'm not sure it made much of a difference in the end. Part of me still wonders "what if?" 20 years later, but I'm not sad with how my life turned out.