Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:🤮🤮🤮
What'sabout smart, young, fun and good looking kids having a great time and getting a good education at a big state school that playing big time football?
They’re not all getting a good education.
You can say that about any school. Just as you can also say that it is very possible to get a good education at EVERY big football school. Plus have lot of fun and be cute.
Yes but generally, people who have the priority of “having a lot of fun and being cute” are the least likely to be getting any meaningful education.
There's nothing wrong with having fun and being cute.
If that is your goal at the age of 18+ and the reason you’re in college- yes, there is.
Anonymous wrote:The ACC schools seem a bit more measured and diverse. I envision you dont have to go out four out of seven days a week and there is more racial diversity, but they still have fun games and a party atmosphere on the weekend. How do they compare to SEC schools?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:🤮🤮🤮
What'sabout smart, young, fun and good looking kids having a great time and getting a good education at a big state school that playing big time football?
They’re not all getting a good education.
You can say that about any school. Just as you can also say that it is very possible to get a good education at EVERY big football school. Plus have lot of fun and be cute.
Yes but generally, people who have the priority of “having a lot of fun and being cute” are the least likely to be getting any meaningful education.
There's nothing wrong with having fun and being cute.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I think I’d be ok being a grumpy not-fun student at an LAC or smaller university that doesn’t have a football team. The women at the Seven Sisters colleges seem to have good college experiences without football. Emory is another places that comes to mind.
Sure. Everybody flocks to Emory for fun times. Ok.
Read the first sentence of OP’s post. It clearly reflects OP’s individual preference. OP is not elevating one type of college experience over another. Whether it’s a big public SEC or a Seven Sisters or an Ivy or a coed SLAC or the Emorys/UChicago’s of this world, it’s up to the individual kid to mine the college experience for what it can offer. I know people who were miserable at Ivies and people who thrived at large state flasgships and vice versa.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I think I’d be ok being a grumpy not-fun student at an LAC or smaller university that doesn’t have a football team. The women at the Seven Sisters colleges seem to have good college experiences without football. Emory is another places that comes to mind.
Sure. Everybody flocks to Emory for fun times. Ok.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Ok, my Ivy kid will hire your SEC sorority girl to be the firm’s receptionist and head of the party planning committee. If she’s lucky, we’ll take her out for lunch on Secretary’s Day.
Ha ha I don’t have an SEC sorority girl, but if I did your Ivy son would want to date her and she wouldn’t be interested (or your Ivy daughter would feel frumpy and inferior standing next to her)
Anonymous wrote:Can we all agree to this? I mean, so much fun, so much variety, and more often than not plenty of smart kids and top academic opportunities?
Who wouldn't want to be a smart, good looking and outgoing Greek guy or girl at an SEC, Big Ten or ACC school? What a time and place to be young.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I can guarantee you my son would’ve been miserable at a Big 10 / SEC school with football and a large Greek presence. I agree that you can get a great education as one, but I’m thankful that there is a college for everyone, as not everyone shares the same likes and dislikes and idea of a good time.
My child is living his best life at a nerdy engineering school where D&D is likely to outrank watching sporting events as a good time for the majority of the student body.
Your son would rather be at a Big 10 / SEC
We’ll, he loathes ball sports, large crowds, and drinking, so he’d be avoiding all that no matter where he was. He picked a good school for him.
he sounds fun![]()
Anonymous wrote:Ok, my Ivy kid will hire your SEC sorority girl to be the firm’s receptionist and head of the party planning committee. If she’s lucky, we’ll take her out for lunch on Secretary’s Day.
Anonymous wrote:How many times are going to post stuff like this? Please touch grass and heal.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I can guarantee you my son would’ve been miserable at a Big 10 / SEC school with football and a large Greek presence. I agree that you can get a great education as one, but I’m thankful that there is a college for everyone, as not everyone shares the same likes and dislikes and idea of a good time.
My child is living his best life at a nerdy engineering school where D&D is likely to outrank watching sporting events as a good time for the majority of the student body.
Your son would rather be at a Big 10 / SEC
We’ll, he loathes ball sports, large crowds, and drinking, so he’d be avoiding all that no matter where he was. He picked a good school for him.