Should the feel of the campus affect the college decision?

<p>Currently, I have been having a hard time deciding which college to go to. I applied to 7 colleges of which 6 have accepted and replied back to me.</p>

<p>My top 3 choices out of the 7 are:
1. University of Wisconsin at Madison for pharmacology and toxicology
2. University of Illinois at Chicago GPPA for pharmacy
3. University of Texas at Austin for pre-pharmacy (it's listed as undecided though)</p>

<p>However, I have not received my admission letter into UIC GPPA pharmacy yet (the release date for decisions is April 1st), I will assume for simplicity that I have gotten in.</p>

<p>I have visited all 3 of these campuses, UW Madison once, UIC twice, and UT Austin once. I thought UW Madison's campus was beautiful, I loved the integrated city-campus effect and I loved their infrastructure! The location was also amazing, I plan, if I go there, to live on the Lakeshore I also loved the little downtown in Madison, I shopped a little when I was over there during the summer.</p>

<p>UIC's campus, on the other hand, didn't really do it for me. Although I love the fact that it's located in Chicago and very close to its downtown, I detested the almost community-college feel of the campus. The buildings were very plain-looking, there was nothing special about UIC visually-wise that I thought was worth remembering about. There didn't seem to be much going on at UIC unlike the other two campuses I visited.</p>

<p>UT Austin's campus was gorgeous. I visited over winter break so it was brisk, which I liked, and the appearance of the buildings impressed me to no end. You can tell that there's a lot to do on campus and the pharmacy building is gorgeous! (UT Austin has the #2 highest rated pharmacy school in the U.S.!)</p>

<p>However the financial cost varies significantly with each of these Universities, assuming I get 0 financial aid from either of these schools, since I am from Illinois, I would be paying out of state tuition for UW Madison which is around ~36k a year, ~27k for UIC, and ~15k for UT Austin (I would qualify as a resident).</p>

<p>According to my AP Scores, UT Austin would also be receiving the most AP credit, so I could potentially be "further" in my studies there than at the other 2 universities.</p>

<p>The deciding factor, I currently see though is that unlike the other two universities, UIC has the GPPA (Guaranteed Professional Program Admissions) program that allows me, if I maintain a certain GPA and pass the PCAT with a certain minimum score, to be automatically accepted into UIC's Pharmacy School which is ranked around #8 in the nation! That's a big deal for me, I really don't want to have to stress over graduate school more than I have to. The other two schools, UT Austin and UW Madison, though they have better campuses in my opinion, do not have this 8 year program that UIC does and I would have to apply for pharmacy school after my 2-3 years of undergraduate studies.</p>

<p>Are there any current or graduated pharmacy students that can help me with this dilemma? Should I take into account how much I like the campus or should I consider more how convenient I could get into pharmacy school at UIC? I would appreciate it so much if you could give me some insight on any of these schools. Sorry for this long post!</p>

<p>This may or may not be a significant consideration for you, but I’ll mention it just in case. UW is beautiful, but my husband went there and he said it’s incredibly challenging getting around the campus in the winter. Cold, windy, snowy, and hilly! I don’t know anything about UIC, but I’m sure it’s cold, too! I’m used to the cold here in Maine, but I’ve always thought I wouldn’t want to go to college in a cold climate, because you’re outdoors so much!</p>

<p>The GPPA program sounds good, though. Is pharmacy school hard to get into?</p>

<p>I know my son, a freshman at UT, would advise you to come to Austin! He loves calling home to tell us it’s 75 degrees there when it’s only 20 here. He also likes the friendly people and the “energy” (his word) on campus.</p>

<p>Good luck with your decision!</p>