Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Mount Holyoke: Classic New England with a gothic vibe and an incredibly chatty tour guide
Columbia: Dark and shadowy in a way I cannot explain - like didn't get sunlight
Conn College: Preptown and small
Skidmore: Not polished -- seemed like a small progressive high school
Never been there, but that is my impression from campus pics!
I interviewed there for my firm a couple of times, and it’s true. Once we were in the most prison-like room I’ve ever been in. One small, high window with bars that looked out onto a dark service alley.
Anonymous wrote:These impressions come from my two DCs and myself over many years (OP asked for fun takes):
UVA - very pretty and charming, but AO's presentation was offputting and student guide kept talking about how he had really wanted to go to an Ivy
VTech - Gothic prison run by turkeys
W&M - retirement home run by colonial-era cosplayers
Villanova - very small (I know it's not), very Catholic, very safe
Georgetown - compressed feel; younger child said it looked like a larger version of Gonzaga College High School
UNC - more accessible version of UVA (town and university better integrated)
Duke - very high-end shopping mall
Stanford - even higher-end shopping mall
Berkeley - students and homeless reeking of pot
Pitt - area near Tower of Learning is very nice, surprisingly international; area near hospital looked more run down
Michigan - 1950s era architecture surrounding faux-Ivy (law school) and ultra-modern (business school)
Harvard - confused about who is from the university and who is a tourist
Amherst - mini-Harvard, but with a beautiful hill/cliff overlooking the athletic fields
Dartmouth - upscaled prep school in the middle of nowhere
Williams - mini-Dartmouth
Yale - beautiful campus surrounded by meh
Wesleyan - mini-Yale
Cornell - peaks and valleys everywhere
Brown - should have been named Beige
Penn - criticisms of location and environment overblown, actually pretty nice
Columbia - Ghostbusters!
NYU - who actually attends classes here?
Johns Hopkins (medical school) - felt like the Matt Damon movie Elysium brought to life
BU - Fenway Park
Anonymous wrote:Boston University: “needs to get over itself.”
Anonymous wrote:W&L. Where is everyone?
W&M. Cannot for the life of me figure out what people do here except attend school?
UChicago - Harry Potter. Frank Lloyd Wright. Do. not. leave. campus. No really. Economists
Wake Forest-> Ralph Lauren
Anonymous wrote:Is everyone's child a genius?! These are all amazing schools! Congrats, parents!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I loved Northwestern. Daughter ended of choosing UPenn because her friends went there. She has regretted not choosing NU ever since, and she's already graduated.Anonymous wrote:Harvard: Bland and a little drab, too touristy.
Yale: Stunningly gorgeous in every way. A+
Princeton: Also beautiful but felt like it lacked patina/character and felt a little too pretentious.
Columbia: LOVED this campus. Gritty, beautiful, classic. NYC.
Northwestern: Another favorite - great mix of modern and classic, and absolutely stunning location on the lake.
UChicago: So classically beautiful. Felt almost European, or stately, but felt extremely gloomy and gray, even though we visited same day as NU.
Cornell: Another great one - stunning location. Friendly, collegial.
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Aw, my kids LOVED Northwestern and ended up elsewhere, too. Would have been thrilled to send at least one of them there if they got in! But things happen for a reason.
Anonymous wrote:Not to worry. A dirty back alley awaits you to puke. Surely, it's not your first.Anonymous wrote:I wish it were possible to puke on a thread.
Anonymous wrote:I loved Northwestern. Daughter ended of choosing UPenn because her friends went there. She has regretted not choosing NU ever since, and she's already graduated.Anonymous wrote:Harvard: Bland and a little drab, too touristy.
Yale: Stunningly gorgeous in every way. A+
Princeton: Also beautiful but felt like it lacked patina/character and felt a little too pretentious.
Columbia: LOVED this campus. Gritty, beautiful, classic. NYC.
Northwestern: Another favorite - great mix of modern and classic, and absolutely stunning location on the lake.
UChicago: So classically beautiful. Felt almost European, or stately, but felt extremely gloomy and gray, even though we visited same day as NU.
Cornell: Another great one - stunning location. Friendly, collegial.
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Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:DC quotes on visit a week ago:
Rutgers - “New Jersey is weird” (Yup but you don’t have to pump your own gas!)
Temple - “Edgy and kinda cool. Not sure if I want my next four years confined to five city blocks…” (Actually was way more impressive than expected.)
UMBC - “Where is everyone? School is in-person, right? Is this one big circle all there is? Where is there a coffee shop I can walk to?” (Answer to that last Q is none.)
UMD - “College Park isn’t that great. But it doesn’t matter I probs won’t get in anyway.” (Truth)
Yikes. Please tell me your DC is looking at schools besides these!
Yeeeesh! Just when I thought I found a fun thread where no one was gonna be mean...
DP. It's obviously not a fun thread. It may be a bit cathartic, though, for some parents to make snide comments about schools they don't want their kids to attend or that their kids have next to no chance of getting into.
Anonymous wrote:Boston University: “needs to get over itself.”
Not to worry. A dirty back alley awaits you to puke. Surely, it's not your first.Anonymous wrote:I wish it were possible to puke on a thread.