University of Miami vs. University of Georgia vs. Clemson

<p>Hi everyone!
I have been accepted at University of Miami, Georgia, and Clemson, and I am so stumped which one I should choose! any suggestions?
- i am a girl from Massachusetts, and I want to go somewhere warm
- i plan on doing something for pre law studies, and i was hoping to major in communications, english, or philosophy</p>

<p>Anyone have an opinion that might make this choice easier?
Thanks!</p>

<p>Don’t know much about U. of Miami. UGA is huge school if that matters. Has actual journalism school - a good one. Clemson is beautiful and great school and feelsl more rural than UGA but definitely stronger in science/eng. IMO. Check the actual majors…unless you love Clemson I’m not sure it would be my first choice for English or philosophy although there is a phil. track geared toward pre-law (based partly on comments from someone who finished in English there). But if you do love the atmosphere, you’ll get a great education there. I hope you have visited to see the atmosphere. Both Clemson and UGA love their sports and there’s lots of school spirit.</p>

<p>Academically, I’d probably go with Miami, then Clemson and then Georgia. Both schools are all pretty awesome too and definitely have warm weather haha</p>

<p>I’m obviously biased towards Clemson but I know a few people who have gone the pre-law track and have been accepted to law school so even though Clemson isn’t the greatest school for english or philosophy, we do get people into law school if that is your goal.</p>

<p>Let me know if you have any questions about Clemson!</p>

<p>D is a communications major at Miami. She absolutely loves it. Very impressed with the professors and advising. PM me if you want her email address. She is a P100 there, and she can tell you almost anything you want about the school. Good luck in your decision.</p>

<p>Son loved Miami. There are many brilliant kids there. Highly regarded.
English Lit and History majors and philosophy minor. Now in highly regarded law school.
By the way, his classes ranged from less than 20 students (most in the 20-15 range) to one class with 60 students. Agreed with Dumbo, great advising. </p>

<p>Law school acceptance is based mostly on LSAT test and college GPA, not school name.</p>