Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I went to Michigan and spent tons of time at Eastern Michigan. Ann Arbor is close to Ypsilanti. Also went to central, western, and state on weekends. My friends came to visit me. Michigan was more expensive, but I received a great education. I had no desire to transfer, but I didn’t care for many of the students - too liberal, east coast, snobby.
It all worked out well. I’m still close with my high school friends. Michigan still opens doors and is respected. I didn’t need friends from there to have a successful career after graduation. The extra money for Michigan was worth it.
I’m glad to hear that you are still friends with your HS friends. I’m in my 50s, all of my friends from elementary school and a few from HS are still my friends. Nobody from college though. I had fun, but the friendships didn’t last a few years post graduation.
Anonymous wrote:I went to Michigan and spent tons of time at Eastern Michigan. Ann Arbor is close to Ypsilanti. Also went to central, western, and state on weekends. My friends came to visit me. Michigan was more expensive, but I received a great education. I had no desire to transfer, but I didn’t care for many of the students - too liberal, east coast, snobby.
It all worked out well. I’m still close with my high school friends. Michigan still opens doors and is respected. I didn’t need friends from there to have a successful career after graduation. The extra money for Michigan was worth it.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Would this bother you as a parent? We're certainly not rich, it was somewhat of a stretch for us to afford a private college. (No debt.) She begged us and we made it happen. Well, a handful of her best high school friends landed at a large public university about 30 minutes away. She talks to or texts her mother on a daily basis and it seems every other day she's headed to and returning from the public university her friends are at. We're not worried about her grades, she's a great student, but I'm concerned she's not dedicating herself to the private college and classmates there. She claims she loves her college. I can't help but feel like what is the point of wasting 3x more for the private if she's itching to be at the cheap public all the time.
remove the public vs elite private.
I'd want my kid at their own school making friends for the first 2 months of school. After that, maybe a once a month visit with HS friends. Otherwise, everyone else will make their friends at her college and it will be hard to fit in.
+1
Anonymous wrote:This is pretty hilarious. My DC went to Michigan and some of DCs private college friends came to visit during football season. I don't think they viewed it as slumming it. DC has also been very successful post graduation, as have his UM friends.
Anonymous wrote:My son married a hygienist he met in dental school. They have been married 20 years and she is a fabulous mother.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Would this bother you as a parent? We're certainly not rich, it was somewhat of a stretch for us to afford a private college. (No debt.) She begged us and we made it happen. Well, a handful of her best high school friends landed at a large public university about 30 minutes away. She talks to or texts her mother on a daily basis and it seems every other day she's headed to and returning from the public university her friends are at. We're not worried about her grades, she's a great student, but I'm concerned she's not dedicating herself to the private college and classmates there. She claims she loves her college. I can't help but feel like what is the point of wasting 3x more for the private if she's itching to be at the cheap public all the time.
remove the public vs elite private.
I'd want my kid at their own school making friends for the first 2 months of school. After that, maybe a once a month visit with HS friends. Otherwise, everyone else will make their friends at her college and it will be hard to fit in.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I get the criticisms here, but I also understand the frustration. And for me, it wouldn’t necessarily be a prestige/association thing. If she would rather be at the public that is cheaper, I’d much rather be paying the public price. End of story.
So transfer, then. End of story