Anonymous wrote:On one hand, I would want to go to the same school because my life wouldn't have turned out the way it did if I had gone to a different school. But aside from that, my dream school now would be a SLAC (probably Amherst or Bowdoin), rather than the HYP that I attended.
Anonymous wrote:[mastodon][/mastodon]Anonymous wrote:I went to Yale because I didn’t get into my dream school Stanford. My kids weren’t/aren’t interested in Yale, despite visiting and touring on beautiful spring days. Maybe because they are into STEM? Not sure. Ironically, my oldest kid’s dream school was Stanford and they had better luck with admissions than I did. Although I’ll never be a Stanford alum, I’m happy to be a Stanford mom.
Beyond luck, I am sure your kid benefitted immensely from having a mom who went to Yale as did the above poster’s kid who is headed to Princeton.
Anonymous wrote:I went to Yale because I didn’t get into my dream school Stanford. My kids weren’t/aren’t interested in Yale, despite visiting and touring on beautiful spring days. Maybe because they are into STEM? Not sure. Ironically, my oldest kid’s dream school was Stanford and they had better luck with admissions than I did. Although I’ll never be a Stanford alum, I’m happy to be a Stanford mom.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I went to a liberal arts HBCU. Dream school would be Stanford or Yale.
Why are people so obsessed with Yale?
We are in DC so there’s a bend towards law and public policy which Yale is top 3 in. But not everyone is obsessed, one PP said they went to Yale but their dream school was Duke. It really depends on the individual.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I went to a liberal arts HBCU. Dream school would be Stanford or Yale.
Why are people so obsessed with Yale?
I went to Yale and it would still be my dream school today.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Don’t get your kids all hung up on a “dream” school. There’s no such thing.
I went to a small SLAC and my best friend went to a huge state school. We visited each other while at college and both commented on how we had similar experiences in so many ways despite our schools being so different. I think it had a lot to do with the people we surrounded ourselves with and the experiences we sought out. So I agree, the idea of one school being "perfect" seems a bit silly (and dangerous) to me.
Anonymous wrote:At this point? I don't think I have a dream school. I think any number of schools would have worked for me.
I "dreamed" of an Ivy when I was a kid, but didn't get in. Went to Wake Forest, though, and that turned out to be a great fit for me (even as a liberal Yankee). It was the Goldilocks school - not too big, not too small, but it also had Division I athletics. The campus was so pretty - definitely sold me when I visited. I made great friends and likely would have made the same choice all over again.
In visiting schools with my daughter, I have liked schools with a well defined campus but near other amenities
Someone mentioned honors colleges at state schools. University of Delaware sold the top kids at my parochial HS HARD on theirs 30 years ago. They kept pulling all of us out of classes to talk to us about it. I actually got very annoyed with them, because I had zero desire to stay home to go to school. I didn't even apply as a safety, which was highly unusual for my class. That said, I had applied to JMU as an OOS student, and they asked me to apply to theirs. I did and would have attended had I not gotten the yes from Wake. I think there are some advantages/benefits to honors colleges, but not sure the honors college is enough reason to go to the OOS school. YMMV