Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:VT is not even known as a work hard play hard school. It is a good school, but definitely not a pressure cooker. They don’t even have weed out classes in engineering like many other schools have.
Laugh. TJ grad’s experience is that VT had multiple weed-out classes in the first 2 years. It is well known their Junior year Engineering student numbers are visibly lower than for Freshman year in Engineering. Its beneficial for down-state smart kids with fewer HS opportunities, to be sure, but to claim no weed out classes is pretty rich.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Bucknell, Virginia Tech, Davidson
My son just graduated from VT, and it definitely wasn't a pressure cooker. Challenging, sure, but he and his friends seemed to be pretty relaxed about it and had a lot of fun too (STEM major, not engineering, and not in a frat if that matters).
VT is not even known as a work hard play hard school. It is a good school, but definitely not a pressure cooker. They don’t even have weed out classes in engineering like many other schools have.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anyone have fairly recent, firsthand experience with Wellesley? My D26 loved Smith and Mt. Holyoke, but I've avoided asking her to check out Wellesley bc of the historically competitive nature of the school. But the marketing stuff they send is heavy on the collaborative, supportive vibe and I've seen current students online raving about how it's extremely supportive. Any input is appreciated!
Not firsthand but Wellesley is having issues.
https://www.insidehighered.com/news/students/academics/2025/04/01/wellesley-non-tenure-track-strike-may-impact-class-credits
Smith's culture is delightful.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:+2. Everything I’ve read recently suggests that UChicago is no longer cut throat pressure cooker?
Chicago has changed a lot in recent years, so it's not the pressure cooker it was, and a lot of alumni are upset about it. It was part of the charm - where fun goes to die and somehow you survive.
I think these days Carnegie Mellon, Cornell, and Berkeley are the worst - mostly because they are all very good at STEM but absolutely garbage at managing human beings, particularly 18-22 year olds. Very stressful schools for those students in already difficult majors.
Perhaps it's not the pressure cooker because it's now more collaborative than competitive? Maybe the students are just nicer now than the UChicago of before.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Princeton
P Y and M. Not sure about H or S.
Huh? Yale inflates grades.
Anonymous wrote:Any of the schools on a trimester system are going to be much more challenging than a university on a traditional semester system.
Instead of a 15 week-ish semester, those schools cram a full semester of work into three 10-week terms.
The pace is intense, and the students need to be very naturally organized and focused, especially in more demanding classes such as calculus or chemistry for example, because the classes are covering the same material in 33% less time.
If your kid is not organized, gets overwhelmed, or gets run down/sick easily, I would avoid the trimester universities, such as Stanford, U Chicago, Northwestern, etc.
Anonymous wrote:VT is not even known as a work hard play hard school. It is a good school, but definitely not a pressure cooker. They don’t even have weed out classes in engineering like many other schools have.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Any of the schools on a trimester system are going to be much more challenging than a university on a traditional semester system.
Instead of a 15 week-ish semester, those schools cram a full semester of work into three 10-week terms.
The pace is intense, and the students need to be very naturally organized and focused, especially in more demanding classes such as calculus or chemistry for example, because the classes are covering the same material in 33% less time.
If your kid is not organized, gets overwhelmed, or gets run down/sick easily, I would avoid the trimester universities, such as Stanford, U Chicago, Northwestern, etc.
On the bright side, they're taking fewer classes at a time.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:+2. Everything I’ve read recently suggests that UChicago is no longer cut throat pressure cooker?
Chicago has changed a lot in recent years, so it's not the pressure cooker it was, and a lot of alumni are upset about it. It was part of the charm - where fun goes to die and somehow you survive.
I think these days Carnegie Mellon, Cornell, and Berkeley are the worst - mostly because they are all very good at STEM but absolutely garbage at managing human beings, particularly 18-22 year olds. Very stressful schools for those students in already difficult majors.
So, is Chicago premed more enjoyable these days?
No.
Is premed "enjoyable" anywhere? You just don't go to med school to party.
Anonymous wrote:Anyone have fairly recent, firsthand experience with Wellesley? My D26 loved Smith and Mt. Holyoke, but I've avoided asking her to check out Wellesley bc of the historically competitive nature of the school. But the marketing stuff they send is heavy on the collaborative, supportive vibe and I've seen current students online raving about how it's extremely supportive. Any input is appreciated!