Cyanide wrote:
Stinkypuppy wrote:
The schools in the University of California system (e.g. UC Berkeley, UCLA, UC San Diego) are also generally very good. However, UC Berkeley and UCLA are massive, and freshman admission is quite competitive. I don't remember how big U of M is.
Which U of M are you talking about? Minnesota or Michigan? Well... I know Minnesota has about 50K students...
Oops I'm sorry, I meant Michigan. I had a friend who went to Michigan and always called it "U of M", so that's what I called it. Didn't know there were other possibilities.
Tim_Tex wrote:
I've heard the University of Michigan is also very expensive, even for residents. I find that very weird, given Michigan's economic situation.
What do you mean? MI's economic situation is terrible right now, has been for years. Less funding available for the public institutions from the government can result in higher tuition.
ruennsheng wrote:
I would want to know the reasons why Michigan fails
Do you mean the poor economic situation? If so, a large part of that has to do with the MI economy heavily focused on manufacturing, particularly cars. And suffice it to say, the Big Three automakers haven't been doing very well... it's pretty hard to find anybody in southeast MI with no ties to the auto industry. Unemployment is high. I don't mean this as a reason not to go to Ann Arbor, as it is still a very good school (and I applied to there for grad school and got in but turned it down
), but it is part of the socioeconomic reality for that area. Detroit has been in serious economic decline for years... though I like the Greek restaurants near the Greektown casino.
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