Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If so, which ones?
Based just on reputation, it seems UCLA and Berkeley are too large and "sink or swim", the other UCs are too expensive for OOS students, Caltech is too hard and cutthroat, Stanford is too impossible, Claremont Colleges are too small or too niche. What are other schools that east coast families found have to be worth long the trip to visit in person? DC is a high stat junior at a top private; above are schools college counsellor and friends of older kids mentioned for campus tours.
Pepperdine?
Oxy?
But you could probably find those two type of schools on the east coast. If you do, please list them.
But OP said her kid was a top stats student Oxy and Pepperdine make no sense. Also, Oxy experienced a 15% decline in student enrollment this past fall, which should be concerning. https://theoccidentalnews.com/news/2025/11/05/college-adjusts-spending-and-admissions-tactics-in-the-wake-of-enrollment-decline/2916071
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My DD goes to college in CA. Yes we visited. It’s easy and quick to drop her off/pick her up from the airport. Lots of her friends go to colleges on the east coast (Boston, Texas, North Carolina, etc) and also fly to their colleges. What’s the difference?
The question was visiting as part of the college search, not now that she’s in college.
Anonymous wrote:No, because I'm not sending a kid to school in California. There is nothing they have there that he can't get closer to home.
Anonymous wrote:My DD goes to college in CA. Yes we visited. It’s easy and quick to drop her off/pick her up from the airport. Lots of her friends go to colleges on the east coast (Boston, Texas, North Carolina, etc) and also fly to their colleges. What’s the difference?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If so, which ones?
Based just on reputation, it seems UCLA and Berkeley are too large and "sink or swim", the other UCs are too expensive for OOS students, Caltech is too hard and cutthroat, Stanford is too impossible, Claremont Colleges are too small or too niche. What are other schools that east coast families found have to be worth long the trip to visit in person? DC is a high stat junior at a top private; above are schools college counsellor and friends of older kids mentioned for campus tours.
Pepperdine?
Oxy?
But you could probably find those two type of schools on the east coast. If you do, please list them.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My kids have *applied* to these schools but we never toured. In my mind, the only reason to tour a school before senior year is to figure out where you want to ED. Those schools weren't in contention so we didn't visit. In reality, the kid will get into just a tiny fraction of where they apply so there's no reason for the time, expense, or frankly getting their hopes up until it becomes a real choice.
OP: I'm interested in this approach. DC is a junior. Do most families here mostly tour potential ED schools? Do you wait to tour other schools after getting acceptance?
How about safeties? Do you tour those too so DC can know there is a safety they would like?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Son visited Stanford, UCB, USC, UCLA, UCSD his sophomore year (October). He loved all of them. Also looked at Chicago schools. He applied REA to Stanford and has accepted offer.
What are rough stats and profile and how does a regular unhooked kid get into Stanford? I thought they only take Olympians, F500 CEOs' kids or FGLI?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My kids have *applied* to these schools but we never toured. In my mind, the only reason to tour a school before senior year is to figure out where you want to ED. Those schools weren't in contention so we didn't visit. In reality, the kid will get into just a tiny fraction of where they apply so there's no reason for the time, expense, or frankly getting their hopes up until it becomes a real choice.
OP: I'm interested in this approach. DC is a junior. Do most families here mostly tour potential ED schools? Do you wait to tour other schools after getting acceptance?
How about safeties? Do you tour those too so DC can know there is a safety they would like?
Anonymous wrote:My kids have *applied* to these schools but we never toured. In my mind, the only reason to tour a school before senior year is to figure out where you want to ED. Those schools weren't in contention so we didn't visit. In reality, the kid will get into just a tiny fraction of where they apply so there's no reason for the time, expense, or frankly getting their hopes up until it becomes a real choice.