<p>Well it looks like I have auto admit to any university in Germany, so what's yalls opinion on the best school in the Bundesrepublik? Only ones I know much about are Heidelberg, München, and Tübingen(since I'm planning on vocational ministry). Any comments/opinions appreciated.</p>
<p>Where are you from? And to me, Germany seems so boring. They wear the same clothes for 2-3 days too i hear. I take it as a language. How can you even understand all the different sentence formations and such?</p>
<p>I'm from Dallas,TX, however I'm fluent in Church German(Hochdeutsch). Granted, the dialect of the region ill study in would have to be learned, but german comes easy to me since I've heard the Pennsylvania Dutch dialect spoken around me all my life. Working on learning the Swabian and Alemmanic dialects right now.</p>
<p>Deutchlanden Ivi Leaguen:</p>
<p>Universishtat uf Goebbles
Kase Vestern Adolph Hitler Universischtad
Instituten der 99 Luft Balloonsen
Hasselhoff A und M
Nordveestern
Harvoff Mudden Collegeen
Bryn Marren Collgen mit Xurlie Mennen
Claudia Schiffer Polytechnichen</p>
<p>Foreigners often get Hasselhoff A und M confused with Hasselhoffstra U. It's sort of the ol' Northwestern/Northeastern thing. A und M is the real deal, whereas Hasselhoffstra is a second-rate college out on Longisland, a spit of land that sits just off shore in the Baltic.</p>
<p>How exactly would you have an auto-admit? Just wondering.</p>
<p>To get auto admit into a German arts and sciences, law, etc.(basically anything non tech you have to score a 3 or above in 1 AP Test from 4 content areas. The Umsiedler policy doesnt hurt either</p>
<p>Hmm, I've never heard Hochdeutsch called Church German. :) Anyways, here are some lists for you:
<a href="http://www.berlinews.de/archiv-2004/2462.shtml%5B/url%5D">http://www.berlinews.de/archiv-2004/2462.shtml</a>
<a href="http://www.restena.lu/acel/lsw/aktuel/19094_4-big.html%5B/url%5D">http://www.restena.lu/acel/lsw/aktuel/19094_4-big.html</a>
I don't know much about German universities, but I'm kind of excited that you want to study in Germany (I definitely plan on studying abroad in Germany). Anyways, the only ones I've even really heard about have been München and Tübingen, but hopefully the lists might help you.</p>
<p>the only reason i call it church german (not every german knows it as this) is because in my ethnic group,the Pennsylvania Dutch, the very traditional families produce trilingual children. First they learn Dietsche, the common dialect, High German, which is used in church, and English, which is used most everywhere. I myself learned English first and the other two wayyyyyy later since my family is in Texas and is not consumed in a PA Dutch environment in Central PA.</p>