<p>so.. if anyone was so kind to name me the pros/cons about UC.. id gladly appreciate it :)<br>
(its just so hard to decide which college!)
thnaks in advance!</p>
<p>I just got in EA, so I probably can't answer as well as a student could, but I know why I applied.</p>
<p>Pros:
Learning for learning's sake / not grade-grubby
Quarter system > semester system
Awesome, awesome course offerings
Good size (4,900- you may or may not think this is a pro)
Seminar style classes, I believe
Extensive core curriculum (pro for me, con for some)
Fun doesn't really die.
Really cool study abroad options.
Chicago? Scav hunt? Other miscellaneous factors?</p>
<p>Cons:
COLD.
WIND CHILL.
Ginormous coat + hats + gloves + scarves = $$$</p>
<p>^Also admitted EA but here's my personal list of pros and cons:</p>
<p>Pros:
The weather =] I love cold and snow!
The Core
"Life of the Mind"
The city of Chicago <em>cue Sufjan Stevens music</em>
Beautiful campus (or so people tell me, I haven't actually visited yet lol)</p>
<p>Cons:
Hard to get a high GPA (I know I'm a grade-grubber, shut up, I want to get into a good law school ok?)</p>
<p>Cold and snow are one thing, but wind... wind is bad. And the ideal me isn't grade-grubby at all. But the real me sometimes says to the ideal me, "That's nice. Now go get an A so that you can get into grad school." So I understand...</p>
<p>The grad school factor freaks me out the most.</p>
<p>LoL... well u guys seem so nice (in comparison to other boards) that I think I am going to apply! hehe... and would you rate it on par of other TOP schools eg Yale, MIT, Cornell?</p>
<p>Yes, completely^^^</p>
<p>Most definitely. UChicago has a GREAT reputation academically, and it's well-deserved.</p>
<p>erm spazzity, in order to get into a good law school make sure you own the LSATs. a good LSAT is more important than an insanely high GPA.</p>
<p>RE: comparison to the other high-end schools, it's just as good academically (possibly even more so), and will likely be worth about as much of the resume boost by the time people applying this year graduate, what with the steps they've been taking to muscle up higher into the (moronic) USNW rankings.</p>
<p>EDIT: Hell, I'd actually say it's better than Cornell.</p>
<p>Thanks srrinath, I know I need high LSAT scores but a high GPA is also really important. LSATs I can work on later; GPA I'd rather not screw up by choosing a reaaaally hard undergrad.</p>
<p>And if we're talking USNAWR, Chicago's "way better than Cornell", according to my Asian father who reads USNAWR as the bible >_> Though personally, I would refrain from comparing the two; Cornell = huge uni in the middle of nowhere, upstate NY, and Chicago = much smaller in CHICAGO, lol, though I guess the weather's comparable.</p>
<p>Pros:
Awesome classes, faculty, Core, etc.
Chicago!
Lovely, if cartoonish, campus
Cute neighborhood?
Grad students all about
Quarter system!
$1 shakes every Wednesday
The study abroad is pretty sweet
Likewise the campus size
Grading's not actually that bad, in my experience
Likin' the dorms</p>
<p>Cons:
Sort of secluded location (not very urban)
The bone-shaking, boot-soaking cold
liek so conservative omg
Weak name recognition
Not super fratty, if you're into that (me, not so much)</p>
<p>I think people stress the super-harsh grading more than they should. Maybe I've just been lucky, but it's not so bad. There's just not much room for coasting. Anyway, it's a cool place. Check it oooouuuuuut.</p>
<p>oatmealia, is Chicago really that conservative? I mean, for being in the city of Chicago (secluded, but still, it's not like in po-dunk nowhere), how conservative can you get?</p>
<p>Why does Chicago have a rather weak name recognition? For me it doesn't matter, but when I tell people what school I want to go to (haha now I have to change that to what school I am going to) they don't really know the university. Only highly educated people seem to understand Chicago's unique prestige.</p>
<p>For having such a legendary Business/Economics school, it really should have wider name recognition. Probably because of the lack of sports, which is the only thing the vulgar commoners recognize :P Though it's not like Stanford/Caltech/MIT have big sports teams. Or any, for that matter (though I could be wrong, the only sport I follow is tennis lol). Northwestern and Wash U are also quite lacking in name recognition. Hmm...</p>
<p>I was joking a bit, but the school does have neo-conservative associations and, some say, a slightly more conservative student body than one might see at a similarly regarded institution of higher learning. From what I've heard from Gender/Sexuality/Race Studies professors, UChicago doesn't have the most progressive history in identity studies, either. It's not overwhelming, though, and no, the campus absolutely is not po-dunk. Don't sweat it.</p>
<p>Thanks for the clarification, oatmealia. I could definitely live with a slightly more conservative student body; one of the things that made me iffy about Columbia was the reputed raging, intense, hardcore left-liberalism complete with protesting socialists, lol.</p>
<p>Stanford has great sports. Some of the top football recruits from my area are going there. They beat USC last year. Northwestern certainly has a better name recognition then Chicago.</p>
<p>Question for current students: What are some pros and cons in terms of majors? As in, which would you say are the strongest and weakest majors?</p>
<p>i wouldn't mind having a decent amount of grade inflation. The way I see it I will learn either way, but I won't have to kill myself for the A. As for the liberalism, being a liberal in Kansas I think I could go for 4 years of Columbia's politics. I'm getting pretty sick of the neocons around here.</p>
<p>strongest majors?
ECONOMICS!!
otherwise idk</p>
<p>polisci maybe?</p>