Anonymous wrote:
In the past few years I’ve known people who chose the following, so yes it happens. Usually financial reasons but don’t discount following your child’s gut. Sounds like your child will be successful wherever they go. No doubt Ivies have the prestige advantage but good for her for not focusing on just prestige.
-UVA over Penn (OOS sports recruit, they could afford full pay but liked UVA better and scholarship)
-UVA (OOS) over Northwestern
-UMich over Penn (semi-local to Penn and wanted out of PA)
-Pitt over Penn (basically full scholarship to Pitt)
-Georgia Tech over 2 T20s, again scholarship
-UNC (OOS) over Harvard (sport scholarship)
-UMich (in-state) over CMU
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I cannot imagine anyone sending a child to Columbia in this current environment, so that wouldn't even be a consideration at my house. Penn, maybe.
But I would take UVA over Penn any day.
I'm not going to say that nothing is happening at Columbia because that would be lying and only Donald Trump is allowed to do that, but things at Columbia really are not as bad on a day to day basis as Trump, Fox News, and the rest of them want you to think. And I am a Jew who is frequently in the neighborhood of Columbia.
That being said, based on the description of the kid, I don't think it is the best fit. But not because of "this current environment."
OP here. Thanks! She's done her due diligence and talked to a number of current Columbia (and Barnard) students that are the children of our friends and friends-of-friends and they all report that most of what is in the press is overblown and hasn't impacted their lives at all (besides currently having to QR code in their guests...)
So she's not dissuaded by the Trump related unrest. More-so because it's hard to tell how great the community is or what the experience is really like. She LOVES NYC but apparently is really attracted to a classic campus, college town experience. She applied far and wide and most of her acceptances were more urban. UVA was one of only several classic college campus options she received that also has high academics.
As a parent it unnerves me a little though.I have read too many disparaging things on here (DCUM) about UVA. And give up a ~4% Ivy acceptance rate spot? (Penn, Columbia?) That gives me a little pause even though I never thought I really valued the Ivies or prestige. i have not said anything to her-This is hard but I and my spouse are keeping our thoughts to ourselves.
Anonymous wrote:OP, what do you mean by social/quality of life? My penn seas DD picked it because of social fit and ability to continue music and be an engineer. She just finished freshman year with a 3.91. The two other top-12 she got accepted to had a similar feel but Penn edged them out with arts and collaboration among engineering evident at admitted days. UVA is very Greek-forward, fewer club spots for freshmen than penn, arts are not easy to do as an engineeri and not at all the quality of life she wanted.
Anonymous wrote:Your daughter told you her choice. Can you imagine telling her, “wrong choice, you will be going to X school?”
If you did do that, would you be prepared for her resentment if she dislikes your choice next year?
I’d let my kid go with UVA (a very well respected school) and never bring up the other school again. If she keeps hearing the “what if?” , she may grow to resent you.
It’s time to listen to her. It’s her college education and experience.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Yes. He chose UMiami.
No one with a brain chooses Miami over better schools.
Anonymous wrote:Your daughter told you her choice. Can you imagine telling her, “wrong choice, you will be going to X school?”
If you did do that, would you be prepared for her resentment if she dislikes your choice next year?
I’d let my kid go with UVA (a very well respected school) and never bring up the other school again. If she keeps hearing the “what if?” , she may grow to resent you.
It’s time to listen to her. It’s her college education and experience.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP, what do you mean by social/quality of life? My penn seas DD picked it because of social fit and ability to continue music and be an engineer. She just finished freshman year with a 3.91. The two other top-12 she got accepted to had a similar feel but Penn edged them out with arts and collaboration among engineering evident at admitted days. UVA is very Greek-forward, fewer club spots for freshmen than penn, arts are not easy to do as an engineeri and not at all the quality of life she wanted.
I think by social I mean friendly, laid back kids, lots of parties, lots of hanging out on the lawn. And there is probably some element of wanting preppy and mainstream.
Greek forward is viewed as a positive to her. She is very smart but isn't a striver (if striver means pushing the envelope beyond what is asked) or an academic and she isn't quirky at all. No obscure interests or passions. Little career direction. She is very well-liked, very hard working, and a perfectionist. She has done very well at a challenging magnet school in highest rigor courses. But she is not entering college with passions about economics or philosophy or robotics or anything really.
Anonymous wrote:OP, what do you mean by social/quality of life? My penn seas DD picked it because of social fit and ability to continue music and be an engineer. She just finished freshman year with a 3.91. The two other top-12 she got accepted to had a similar feel but Penn edged them out with arts and collaboration among engineering evident at admitted days. UVA is very Greek-forward, fewer club spots for freshmen than penn, arts are not easy to do as an engineeri and not at all the quality of life she wanted.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:In this case the schools are largely the same so prestige doesn't matter so the child can choose the more social school without sacrificing academics and prestige.
But in other cases one has to consider the peer group. The other kids might be "fun" but will your kid have a lot in common with them? Will these kids go on to do the same level of things that grads of the higher ranked schools do? For many of us, our college friends are our lifelong friend group and network.
Agree peer group matters for all the reasons.
But UVA students are not at all the same peer group as northwestern and the ivies.
You are grossly underestimating UVA peer group. Grossly.
Top 10% at UVA might equal top 50% at Penn or Northwestern. Just a rough sketch.