Anonymous wrote:Best: UMass Amherst
Anonymous wrote:JMU the best
A little surprised to hear that. My marching band DC has done their summer program the last couple years. Loves a lot of things about JMU but was turned off by the dorms (Hillside / Bell) and the food in the dining hall. Maybe summer is different/worse?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I believe Niche and Princeton Review have covered this topic ad nauseum.
Because, after all, colleges should be chosen mostly on food hall quality (with some consideration for climbing walls and lazy rivers).
If your kid is an athlete, it matters a lot. Imagine paying for room and board, and then having to subsidize with more money so they can fill the tank. Quality and volume impact both athletic performance and academic learning. My older kids were not athletes but Mr. 14 is. Just started high school and our grocery bills have almost doubled. He is a combustion engine.
The question is valid, even if the answers are of no significance to you. I’ll be asking the same question three years from now.
That cute if you think D1 athletes eat the regular dining hall fare.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:from what we've seen
Best
Yale
Princeton
Middlebury
Worst
Georgetown
George Washington
Tufts
Cornell U is pretty amazing. Keep in mind good dining needs to be based on not just food options but also accessibility. Good dining options should have different time choices (for e.g. open late at night), place to pick up quick healthy lunches (b'cos honestly often kids have no time to sit and eat lunch between classes), and good variety for vegetarian etc.
JMU the best
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I believe Niche and Princeton Review have covered this topic ad nauseum.
Because, after all, colleges should be chosen mostly on food hall quality (with some consideration for climbing walls and lazy rivers).
If your kid is an athlete, it matters a lot. Imagine paying for room and board, and then having to subsidize with more money so they can fill the tank. Quality and volume impact both athletic performance and academic learning. My older kids were not athletes but Mr. 14 is. Just started high school and our grocery bills have almost doubled. He is a combustion engine.
The question is valid, even if the answers are of no significance to you. I’ll be asking the same question three years from now.
Anonymous wrote:from what we've seen
Best
Yale
Princeton
Middlebury
Worst
Georgetown
George Washington
Tufts
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:George Washington has great food, actually.
Please don't confuse it with Georgetown.
W&M had the worst food of all the colleges we visited two years ago, but I've heard they overhauled their dining.
That must be new, because when I went there 20 years ago the food hall was truly pathetic.
Seriously, don't come on here with your opinions from 20 years ago. I just posted that W&M apparently improved its dining from two years ago!
GWU has done very nice renovations in its dorms and dining halls. It's got a great rec center, lots of new spaces.
NEW EXPERIENCES ONLY, please, or else mention how long ago your experience was.
Anonymous wrote:Any intel on the food trucks at UVA? My kid is hanging their hat on that.
I had some undercooked pasta at orientation but the salad bar was ok.