Anonymous wrote:really? didnt know Purdue has the same system for engineering majors?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We are doing a tour of Pacific Northwest schools and I keep thinking I missed out! Schools are beautiful, weather is great, food is delicious, and generally friendly campus visits. I wish I had left the East Coast for college.
weather isn't "great".
The weather in the Pacific Northwest is awesome. What are you bugging about?
Anonymous wrote:U Washington’s engineering admission is messed up.
U can only apply to Engineering school - but not a specific major.
Freshman grades determine who gets their choice of major. For in demand fields like electrical engineering - the competition is fierce
Know of 2 kids who dropped out since they could only
get Civil or Environmental Engineering
quite sad. would never apply here.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Univ. of Washington is an excellent school with a beautiful campus, strong programs in CS, business and engineering, and is right near everything that's great about Seattle (Lake Washington, biking/walking trails, etc.). The weather is milder than most places in the country, especially in the winter. I think of it as the west coast version of Northwestern. Better air and traffic than L.A. or S.F.
Agree. UW is the full package and my DS (engineering) loved it!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It’s not the weather that is the major problem with the PNW, it’s the insufferable people.
The irony of this statement originating from, presumably, someone in Washington, DC is just.... incredible.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We are doing a tour of Pacific Northwest schools and I keep thinking I missed out! Schools are beautiful, weather is great, food is delicious, and generally friendly campus visits. I wish I had left the East Coast for college.
weather isn't "great".
I'd take "grey and a bit dreary in the 40-50s" over 10-20, grey and snowy/icy
This is how most of us out here see it. Plus, we have beautiful changing views of water and mountains and lakes at every turn so it's not just flat land and gray skies. I scrape my car windshield maybe 1x/year at most. And if I drive an hour, I'm skiing in the mountains and get all the snow I want. Then I return to weather in the 40s-50s, no winter boots ever, and a light puffy coat and get on with my work week.
Anonymous wrote:Go, Ducks!
It rains here and is gray for a long stretch from fall through early spring. Not much snow. Last winter wasn’t so bad but the magic of summertime is not matched weather-wise by the rest of the year!
Anonymous wrote:It’s not the weather that is the major problem with the PNW, it’s the insufferable people.
Anonymous wrote:LOL PNW native here. People visit in July or August for our one week of summer and fall in love… it’s a different story the rest of the year when people need full spectrum light treatment to ward off seasonal depression!
Anonymous wrote:Colleges and universities in towns across Ohio, Pennsylvania and New York have more cloudy days than the PNW. State College and Pittsburgh, PA; Ithaca and Syracuse, NY; Cleveland and Columbus, OH. I lived in Seattle for a few years and was blown away by the gorgeous weather - sure, cloudier than the sunbelt where I grew up, but not nearly as dreary as people think and definitely better weather than PA, OH and NY. So many college towns in those states have waaaay more cloudy days than the famously "gloomy" PNW!
Anonymous wrote:Colleges and universities in towns across Ohio, Pennsylvania and New York have more cloudy days than the PNW. State College and Pittsburgh, PA; Ithaca and Syracuse, NY; Cleveland and Columbus, OH. I lived in Seattle for a few years and was blown away by the gorgeous weather - sure, cloudier than the sunbelt where I grew up, but not nearly as dreary as people think and definitely better weather than PA, OH and NY. So many college towns in those states have waaaay more cloudy days than the famously "gloomy" PNW!
Anonymous wrote:Univ. of Washington is an excellent school with a beautiful campus, strong programs in CS, business and engineering, and is right near everything that's great about Seattle (Lake Washington, biking/walking trails, etc.). The weather is milder than most places in the country, especially in the winter. I think of it as the west coast version of Northwestern. Better air and traffic than L.A. or S.F.