help! help! help!

<p>I REALLY need to find some more schools that are relatively inexpensive, that are spirited with athletics (i.e. football games), in the northeast, pretty campus, good education.... decent business/economics/spanish program. PLEASE give some suggestions!</p>

<p>try the University Of Connecticut, SUNY Geneseo, and The College Of New Jersey (Yes I know that New Jersey and New York aren't in the northeast but close enough)</p>

<p>I'd recommend TCNJ for its beautiful and lively campus and excellent education and it has great D3 athletics (plus its very inexpensive, just over 20,000 for out-of-staters, 10,000 for in-staters), UConn would be your choice though if you want D1 athletics. SUNY Geneseo is D3 I believe but a very good school academically.</p>

<p>thank you very much! i count nj and ny as northeast so no worries. i'll definitely look into those schools! uconn sounds very appealing, but i will research the others as well. thanks!</p>

<p>2 more schools: University Of Vermont and Penn State</p>

<p>Penn state is not northeast</p>

<p>I consider Penn State to be roughly northeast... probably more mid-atlantic but I am just looking for schools that are in the North, on the east coast.</p>

<p>Also, are there schools that have relatively small classes and teacher-student interaction? I know public universities tend to have larger classes but if I can have some sort of interaction with the teacher that'd be nice...</p>

<p>that's why I suggested TCNJ and SUNY Geneseo, classes are equal to the size of a liberal arts school</p>

<p>Really? Good to know</p>

<p>according to US News: 0.4% of classes at TCNJ are over 50 people</p>

<p>What about Colgate or Boston College --- decent football spirit and close interaction with professors.</p>

<p>I actually visited BC and I just didn't feel like it was a right fit. Also, I've heard Colgate is not really near any real city or metropolitan area (basically it's isolated) and I want somewhere that is near some sort of city-like area (not big city -- just not rural)</p>

<p>oh and I forgot, you should check out Pittsburgh, it's in a city (dunno if you like that) but I'm obliged to share that with you since I've been accepted there and am prob gonna go there next year</p>

<p>I actually have a lot of friends who live in Pittsburgh, although I'm not from the area nor the state. But I'll look into it! Do they have good academics??</p>

<p>Pittsburgh's major draws are in the medical fields because of the world-renown research-oriented University Of Pittsburgh Medical Center so programs in dentistry, pharmaacology, physical therapy, neuroscience and biology are strong. Business, liberal arts and engineering are also good.</p>

<p>Another major draw academically is the study abroad program which has many different options and is cheap! The advantage of the school as a whole is that as a large school, it has many opportunities for research and internships but you can make it smaller inside your major.</p>

<p>Ohhh, I see! That sounds great! I'll check it out and see if I can visit. Thank you!</p>