<p>I should say Johns Hopkins since Brown waitlisted me.</p>
<p>But I’m going to go with Brown because of the open curriculum.</p>
<p>I should say Johns Hopkins since Brown waitlisted me.</p>
<p>But I’m going to go with Brown because of the open curriculum.</p>
<p>Do you really need to ask?</p>
<p>Brown is Brown and JHU is JHU</p>
<p>so obviously Brown.</p>
<p>you’re right, brown is brown. With the color symbolic of its reputation, it’s not respected for engineering or the sciences or internationally.</p>
<p>As a student admitted to both Brown and Hopkins, I recently visited both and found the students at Brown to be genuinely friendly – a lot more so than the students at Hopkins. Brown is also known to be the happiest school in the country. I don’t know if student life is really a big factor for you, but I’m just putting it out there…</p>
<p>Just as a quick note: the curriculum at Hopkins offers a great deal of flexibility as well. You have a few core courses for your major that you need to take, and the rest is pretty much up to you.</p>
<p>Brown - open curriculum. :)</p>
<p>Brown, even though Hopkins is better for science - essentially because I’ve been to both and I liked Brown but not Hopkins.</p>
<p>Brown. I think it would be easier to get a good GPA at Brown, which would allow for some solid grad school options. I also think the quality of life would be higher at Brown. I don’t think either school opens doors to employers as well as you might expect, though. Some might consider Princeton comparable to Brown for undergrad. And yet if you want a job right out of college, Princeton smashes Brown to pieces. Go figure.</p>
<p>John Hopkins… it seems more structured.</p>