<p>If you got into those then you’ll get into NYU!</p>
<p>u cant ask for admission once youve been LSP’d. ur stuck there until u transfer out once ur actually in NYU.
thats not reeeally an acceptance…</p>
<p>Jeez, people. LSP IS A VALID PART OF NYU. </p>
<p>It’s 100 percent an acceptance. You’re a student of NYU, even in LSP. That means you are accepted.</p>
<p>Yeah I don’t see the stigma associated with it <_<</p>
<p>i dont really care what people think about it. getting into nyu at all is an accomplishment in itself. AHHHH I’M SO STOKED!!!</p>
<p>College is not high school, people won’t really give a **** if you’re in LSP. </p>
<p>If one cares so much about being in LSP and think it’s some reflection about them personally. . . they might have some deeper troubles.</p>
<p>if u get into LSP, they are onyl accepting u because they want ur money…</p>
<p>Honestly.</p>
<p>Sigh.</p>
<p>"if u get into LSP, they are onyl accepting u because they want ur money… "</p>
<p>I’ll let you in on a little secret: NYU exists to take our money. Really, it is nothing more than an overbloated bureaucracy held together by bits of red tape, raping all our wallets. shh, don’t let anyone else know…</p>
<p>seriously, do you think they charge LSP students more tuition or something lol? I was placed in liberal studies and they gave me a selective merit scholarship for about $20,000/year…so there goes your money theory, sorry…</p>
<p>when you spell at at 1st grade level, be grateful you got into college at all.</p>
<p>one random question…what is LSP?..</p>
<p>^ search it.</p>
<p>it means liberal studies program.</p>
<p>so if I didn’t receive that email and I applied to Steinhardt do you think that’s a bad sign? Or do they only offer LSP admission to rejected CAS-ers?</p>
<p>D applied to Steinhardt, haven’t heard or got anything yet.</p>
<p>aliz2012,
i wouldn’t tell someone with a 1520/1600 and a 4.0 that he is spelling on a first grade level.
and i never implied that they charge LSP students more.</p>
<p>ylmc123,</p>
<p>A) It’s Alix with an “x”, not a “z”.
B) You spell at a first grade level.</p>
<p>I got accepted into Liberal Studies, and after doing my research, I couldn’t be more excited! I’m not trying to make it sound better than it actually is or anything, but it seems like there are lots of perks that come with being in LSP. You get smaller class sizes, more interaction with classmates and teachers, and end up with an extra degree (AA) that normal CAS students don’t get.</p>
<p>Because from the way you were typing, we are supposed to surmise your SAT score and GPA?</p>
<p>again, from a parent. LSP is the 2nd largest undergrad program at NYU. It is fully a part of the university. My kid has friends from all the undergrad schools at NYU and NO ONE CARES SHE IS IN LSP. She has taken LSP and “regular” CAS classes and found no difference in quality of students; actually she liked the small LSP classes, the students, and the profs very well (with one exception who she thought was a boring teacher, and you get those at every college). In my opinion only, and I am comparing it to other programs my two other kids went to: the LSP curriculum is superior to the general ed one of my kids had to take at an Ivy, and similar in (high) quality to the outstanding small classes at a women’s college my other kid went to. But my kids like that kind of thing (discussion, writing, “great books.”) Also, frankly I would rather my kid be taking a smaller LSP class than be taught in a section by a grad student who may be very bright but doesnt have much teaching experience yet. SIT IN ON CLASSES IF YOU CAN AT ANY SCHOOL YOU ARE CONSIDERING. Good luck!</p>
<p>ooooh, someone just got schooled!!!</p>
<p>Pwnage!!!</p>
<p>I’ll add that one should look back at the stats of kids that got LSPd. Some of them were 4.0 and 2000+.</p>