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    The university conundrumYuri Sanspeur04/09/12 | Commentaires [20]

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    The month of April is surely a tough one for a substantial number of applicants to US universities. Some have been

    rejected down the line, a corollary of exponentially increasing competition to access the land of opportunities they are

    left speculating about other options and how this bad news will affect their future life. Ironically, some are admitted

    to top-notch universities and yet face a daunting amount of speculation too, especially international students like

    myself whose main tool for choosing one school over the other remains the internet, replete with student reviews as

    dubious as they are insightful...

    Applying to the US as a Mauritian (international) is, indeed, a lot of hard work and this doesnt end until you are

    certain about which school you will be attending. I applied to 13 schools in total mainly because the US has become

    too competitive. Out of the 13 schools, I was accepted to 6 of them-University of Michigan-Ann Arbor, University ofIllinois - Urbana Champaign, Northeastern University, University of Southern California, University of Delaware and

    finally Brown University. I was waitlisted at Johns Hopkins University and rejected at Princeton, Stanford, Carnegie

    Mellon, MIT, UC Berkeley and Cornell. Since the day I received all my decisions, I have spent most of my time on the

    internet trying to eliminate universities and have managed to do so leaving solely the university of Michigan and

    Brown University, two excellent universities.

    The first reaction of most Mauritian students who have been granted admission into an Ivy League University is to

    respond positively to this honorific acceptance. Ivy Leagues are known for their amazingly inhumane admission

    rates (7 percent this year for internationals having applied to Brown) and I will not deny that I was, at first, lured

    blindly by the aura of prestige that surrounds such institutions. However, it struck to me that I ought, for my own

    good to carry out a systematic listing of the pros and cons of each university and attribute a specific weightage to them

    based on my idea of what the characteristics of an ideal undergraduate education entail (a strong analytical

    foundation in math, engineering and physical sciences while at the same time a broad based, flexible education that

    would enable me to view things from different perspectives) as had been the case earlier. But where to get such

    valuable and accurate information about schools so remote and education systems so different from our own ?

    Of course, the internet was helpful during such a task but it was time consuming to weed out comments about the

    schools which arose from frustration or unhealthy competition between them. I looked at the rankings (both

    worldwide and in the engineering discipline) for each university and found out that Michigan outweighed Brown in

    that respect. I also sought direct advice from friends and family who had pursued their undergraduate education in

    the US. I received the first counsel from a friend, Stefanos Polyzoides, who went to Princeton University and who,

    without a doubt, recommended the excellent liberal arts education at Brown. He spurred me to go to Brown for an

    undergraduate degree because it would help me develop a well-roundedness that would be absent at Michigan where

    engineering is considered in a very pointy fashion like at Imperial, a UK university I received an offer from. At Brown,

    engineering is interdisciplinary and, in Stefanos words, hence prevents individuals from focusing their learning too

    early in life and helps them to understand the consequences of their actions in the context of human cultures and

    economies. According to him, it would also ignite a sense of creativity and uniqueness which hardcore andspecialized engineers lack tremendously. As a man who went to Princeton with a view to studying engineering but

    who wound up studying architecture and urban design, Stefanos described the flexibility and non-restrictive nature of

    the curriculums at liberal arts schools as a big advantage for not only the undecided but those who come to university

    with a false preconceived notion of a subject.

    I also received advice from a friend who goes to MIT, Rachel Ah Chuen. She told me that she would choose Brown

    over Michigan because she viewed education as not only about academics but as a means of making one grow and

    build ones character and vision. Going to Brown would help me not to become a robot mechanically studying and

    not wanting to explore beyond that. She also underlined the prestigious alumni network that you get access to once

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    you enroll into an Ivy League university and which will open so many doors after graduation. As for the rankings, she

    said that one ought not put too much emphasis on the latter at the undergraduate level because education at this

    stage remains broad. However she believes that at the graduate level things become different and re- cruiters start to

    value students from highly ranked graduate schools. Among the factors that led Rachel to opt for Brown was its crazy

    overall admission rate: 9.7 percent compared to 41 percent for Michigan. This would ensure that everybody you would

    be encountering at Brown would be exceptionally brilliant in his or her field and would influence you to aim higher in

    whatever you plan to undertake. The student to faculty ratio at Brown also spurred her to choose the latter over

    Michigan: Brown would enable me to build an intricate relationship with professors and faculty that could lead to

    research because of its small community. The only advantage of going to Michigan according to he r would be that

    you would benefit from a more structured and pointy form of engineering with possibly better hands-on experience.

    It would also be difficult, in her opinion, to change majors at Michigan.

    My cousin Avnish Gungadurdoss, who went to Dartmouth and Harvard, was also at the forefront in helping me

    choose between the two. He said that he would lean heavily towards Brown given the name recognition and the truly

    liberal nature of its education. It''s an awesome school I think. I don't know much about Michigan though and you

    should investigate the choices further for sure. To investigate the choices further he connected me with two people,

    one from Brown and one from Michigan, with whom I had skype conversations which also led me to think that Brown

    was a better deal for undergraduate and that Michigan was better at the graduate level.

    Kavita Arora, from Carnegie Mellon university, also recommended Brown university for the simple reason that the

    people there would all be of a very high intellectual ability and that because of the very small and select community atBrown, I would not drown among the masses of students and would not have to forsake my identity. She also spoke

    about the well-roundedness that comes with a Brown degree.

    Last but not least, I spoke with my cousin at Cornell University, Yashna Gungadurdoss, who made me connect with

    engineers at Cornell and at Michigan, many of whom advised me to opt for Michigan if I was dead set about wanting

    to pursue engineering (which I am not). Most importantly, she advised me that the university you will be choosing

    depends largely on what your priorities are.

    Choosing from and applying to US universities is never an easy task especially for internationals who are kind of

    disconnected with what is going on in the US. I wrote this article to give Mauritians an insight into the tedious but

    nevertheless rewarding US application process to show them that it requires a lot of work and most importantly a lot

    of feedback from those who have already encountered the US.

    What is important to understand is that Brown and Michigan are both excellent universities and that what it all boilsdown to is to what extent the university fits your requirements. Do you want a pointy and specialized education or a

    more broad based one? What I am sure though is that communication and the right connections are indeed the

    secrets behind solving this riddle, this university conundrum...

    Imprimer Envoyer Sauvegarder

    Les dernires reactions

    Heh.Par:-P. Aug 20, 2012

    Ok. The article's author applied to college in the US, got in some places, rejected at others and it appears that hewas a laureate. Big woop. Seriously though, congratulations on your offers, Yuri. As for the actual article? I don'tsee what it accomplishes besides giving the readers a peek into your thought process for choosing one college overanother. It does not "give (Mauritians) an insight into the tedious but nevertheless rewarding US applicationprocess to show them that it requires a lot of work". Barely any mention of the essays, transcripts, recommendationand counselor letters or of ways to look for various colleges to apply to. As it turns out, most Mauritians can't afforda school like UIUC, which doesn't have much in the way of financial aid for non-US citizens. The colleges that arepart of the Ivy League and many of the liberal arts colleges (for instance, Amherst) are the ones with financial aid

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    available for international students. Bear in mind that most are *not* need-blind, meaning that one's financial needdoes factor in the admissions' decision! For what it's worth, I don't think you could go wrong with either. UMich isa *large* school and the odds you'd definitely find lots of interesting people there. Another important thing is aparticular school's "culture". That becomes more important if you're at a small school. For instance, *I*, because ofmy own personality traits, would probably be miserable at Oberlin but would probably fit in nicely at Williams. It'shard to gauge how a school is like from so far away and more often than not, one will be wrong. Watching youtubevideos, talking to current students and/or alumni and reading extensively through their website helps. I won't

    name the college but there's one LAC whose website I was on recently and they seemed proud of a recent grad oftheir's who was getting her book published. Guess what? After listening to an excerpt of her book reading, it doesn'tlook any better than 50 Shades of Grey, which in my opinion, is about as worthwhile as a burger from the localSteers. Which, if you have similar taste to me, is not very much. And Yul, the difference between the out-of-statetuition fees for a large public university is not *that* different to that of a private one. For Mauritians that can'tafford a US education, a private university/college is a better bet. They're generally the ones with more financial aidon offer.

    @Yuri

    Par:-CM Apr 12, 2012

    Well done, Yuri! You are embarking upon an exciting adventure. Whatever be your final choice, I wish you the verybest. - Former laureate and University of Michigan graduate. Go Blue!

    Good luck

    Par:-Maxim YM Apr 11, 2012Many of you have been criticizing him, saying that he is only bragging about his offers. He admitted that he wasshortlisted to one uni and rejected to six others. By this, he proved that even if you are a laureate, you are notautomatically admitted to all universities in the world. This young man worked hard during his high school days,making a lot of sacrifices. Now, being in a democratic republic, he has the right to give his opinion and share hisexperience about applying to US universities. This is what his Moral Values teacher taught him. Good luck Yuri!Hope you serve the country and the whole world later.

    @ Yul

    Par:-A Apr 11, 2012

    What part of "financial aid" did you not understand? Most private universities give financial aid. And top-notchschools , including most ivies, if not all of the, are need-blind.

    Just for the sake : cost

    Par:-Yul Apr 11, 2012

    Costs (2011 - 12): Tuition and Fees: $42,230 Books: $1,312 Room and Board: $10,906 Other Expenses: $1,702Total Cost: $56,150 Average Amount of Aid at Brown Uni: Grants: $28,953 (2010-2011) Loans: $6,178 ( X - not asa foreign student) ------------------ State university like Ann Arbor Costs (2010 - 11): Tuition and Fees: $11,837 (in-state); $36,001 (out-of-state) Books: $1,048 Room and Board: $9,192 Other Expenses: $2,090 Total Cost: $24,167(in-state); $48,331 (out-of-state) Average Amount of Aid Grants: $11,800 ____________________ Differencebetween a public and private uni . If you want to get hired at Goldman Sachs after you graduate , play Lacrosse atschool to network and the best one for that is Duke University.

    Voir plus

    Vos Commentaires

    Autres commentaires rcents

    Normal Mauritians do go to the US

    http://www.lexpress.mu/story/36807-the-university-conundrum.html#commenthttp://www.lexpress.mu/story/36807-the-university-conundrum.html#commenthttp://www.lexpress.mu/story/36807-the-university-conundrum.htmlhttp://www.lexpress.mu/story/36807-the-university-conundrum.htmlhttp://www.lexpress.mu/story/36807-the-university-conundrum.htmlhttp://www.lexpress.mu/story/36807-the-university-conundrum.html#comment
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    Par:-AB Apr 10, 2012

    @Zzz: I went to Tufts ($51k per year) ... my parents only had money for my plane ticket. It is possible to getscholarships from private universities in the US. And that gives kids whose parents have modest means to still get aprestigious education.

    Further studies in US

    Par:-Roro Apr 10, 2012Students should not give the world rankings too much weight as the ranking is greatly influenced by the graduatestudy programmes and research undertaken.There is little difference in quality for a university ranked 20 and 40 Iwould say. What is also important is the environment suitable for you. US climate and living vary from state tostate city to city. You should be at ease where you are and that also will help you achieve the best.

    @John

    Par:-Yul Apr 10, 2012

    I said "Why did you apply to an Engineering school when you don't want to be trained , let alone making a career inthe field , as an engineer? " There is a difference between TRAIN AS and making a CAREER IN . I am trained as anengineer ( specialized in a certain field for my Master's degree after a BSEE) and after having been in R&D and thena systems engineer, I changed my career from engineering to evolve in the product mgmt side of a US Fortune 100corpo and now am a consultant . So I do know the difference and I used the words "let alone" !

    @ APar:-Yul Apr 10, 2012

    May be it will be good for you to differentiate between US PRIVATE universities ( the 8 IVY leaguers are amongstthem) and the PUBLIC universities in addition to the state universities where one can get an associate degree in 2yrs also. Check how much it costs a first yr student at Yale or Columbia or Harvard . Been there done that back inthe 80's and at some they wanted the SAT even though the HSC results were good. BTW managed to work 20 hoursa week to enable me to survive Yes I can go to the State university of Oregon and pay only $ 20 K everythingincluded but that's not the case of Dartmouth or Cornell or the other 6 IVY league PRIVATE uni. Even the publicIvies - like Ann Arbor or Virginia ( for Engineering) cost an arm and a leg. So explain or understand the rating ofthe US Universities first before you preach . May be you didn't realize about the rankings and please get your factsstraight also because his Laureat scholarship from the Mauritian govt won't be enough at Brown or any Ivy leagueuni on the east coast.

    REPLY TO F

    Par:-Adolphe MedgarApr 10, 2012

    SINCE YOU ASKED WHAT DID I REALLY TAUGHT TO MY FORMER STUDENTS? DEAR F, ONE THING IREALLY DID TEACH MY STUDENTS IS THIS : DO NOT WASTE YOUR TIME !

    How many 'normal' Mauritians go to US?

    Par:-Zzz Apr 10, 2012

    Its a nice perspective from Yuri, but the fact is, how many of the 10,000 HSC students for the year 2011 are going tothe US? Yuri is among the exception who got the chance to go to US for further studies, and he deserve it becausehe is gifted, got a government scholarship if am correct? Excluding the 1000 HSC mauritians who will go abroadthis year for studies, the 9000 left will be stuck here in our under-performing educational system - simply becausethey got 5Bs or they are not rich enough to pay for themselves. Well Yuri, you are gifted, one day when you get anice job, do something back for you country, think of the 9000 who are not as lucky as you.

    Reply to Yul and Ton Rolo

    Par:-A Apr 10, 2012

    Going to the US for studies often costs WAY LESS than going to the UK and Australia. This is one significant pointthat many of you don't realize. Applying to the US is 10x more work than applying to the UK or Australia. You gottahave extra curriculars, you have to have achieved something unique in your life, AND, you have thousands of essaysto write and those essays are not like the generic "personal statement" that UK universities ask for. My point is,stop saying that he's lucky that he's "rich enough to go study in the US", this is totally irrelevant. Most USuniversities give A LOT of financial aid. Do British and Australian universities give as much? ( or do they, even? ).You have the impression that since the US is so far, it has to be a sort of "american dream" and has to be moreexpensive than the more common options. Well, it is NOT, on the contrary, it is often less. Most people don't really

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    apply to the US because it's far and because the application process is more complicated than most , but the oneswho do it, very very often don't pay the entire tuition fee, while they would probably do if they went elsewhere. Getyour facts straight before posting comments like this.

    Reply to ton rolo

    Par:-John Apr 10, 2012

    "Btw most students in mauritius would not have this conundrum because they are not rich or scholarship winnersto be able to pick and choose."- That's where you are totally wrong here. Most US universities, compared to UK unisfor example, offer financial aid up to 80%. US unis don't really care whether you have the money or not to pay fortuition fees, once you're good enough to get it, they will pay for you. You don't have to be rich to go to a gooduniversity in the US, you just have to be really smart and be a well-rounded individual.

    university conumdrum

    Par:-ton rolo Apr 10, 2012

    Was that article really aimed to Mauritian students? I wonder how many can go to the US for studies.. As we say increole " cave compte lor lesdoigts ".. From my point of view, I think he's only bragging about himself and hisachievements of having been accepted by these US universities. I quote "....that would be absent at Michigan whereengineering is considered in a very pointy fashion like at Imperial, a UK university I received an offer from. " Do doyou think we really care to know if you got an offer from Imperial College ? Stop bragging and don't waste yourtime writing an article when you should in fact take a decision. Btw most students in mauritius would not have thisconundrum because they are not rich or scholarship winners to be able to pick and choose.

    Par:-John Apr 10, 2012

    What Yuri is trying to say, in my opinion, is that he is open to more options, more possibilities. He might think hewants to go into engineering, but seriously, who knows what he/she wants to do really at 18years old? What he istrying to say is that, being at Brown will help him explore his options more, meet smart people, get inspired bythem and figure out what he really loves/likes. Also, majoring in engineering does not mean you have to be anengineer, so many people major in engineering end up going into finance, consulting or non-related fields.

    Tertiary Ed

    Par:-Yul Apr 09, 2012

    "I wrote this article to give Mauritians an insight into the tedious but nevertheless rewarding US applicationprocess to show them that it requires a lot of work and most importantly a lot of feedback from those who havealready encountered the US." No it is just bragging rights about you, your family, acquaintances and the fact that ,

    either you are the lucky "winner" of a scholarship from the US Embassy or your family have the means to send youto the US. What do you want to do in your professional life? Why did you apply to an Engineering school when youdon't want to be trained , let alone making a career in the field , as an engineer? What is /are your goal(s) forattending a US uni? Just for the prestige of grabbing a liberal arts 4-yr degree and then decide what you want toaccomplish afterwards . The conundrum of applying to a developed country uni for a first degree, quite a few of ushave been there since the country became independent ... no one at the ministry of Education to advise or counselthe student most of the Embassies or High Commissions didn't even bother - well you just knock on the door forthe student visa once you've been accepted, refusal from the Australian HC to grant visas to non-white or ChristianMauritians in the 70s and 80s. It was a DO or DIE endeavour especially if one wanted to specliase in a high-techfield.

    reply

    Par:-F. Apr 09, 2012

    I'm confused here. What, possibly, is there to pity in hard work? Is it pitiful that he has worked his ass off to getinto one of the best colleges? Such an odd logic here. I'm surprised you were a former lecturer in the US given thatyou think that there is no additional advantage studying in the US. Is that what you teach your students? God Ihope not, because I must admit, this is a very narrow-minded and vacuous comment, coming from a "formerlecturer"

    O'B'1

    Par:-Hans Dky Apr 09, 2012

    Having studied in the US, I can tell you that it is one of a kind experience. If I was in your shoes, I will opt for Uni ofMichigan - main reason being that it does specialize in the field you are seeking to major in and that yourdevelopment will come out from the extra curricular activities you will get yourself involved. Alongside, you can

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    always get more broader education from the library of Uni of Michigan if that's where your interest is....Uni ofMichigan is well known and I am sure that they do have Fortune 500 companies coming over in the campus for JobFair. There is also a group called Mauritians in United States in Facebook...Join in and make the most of yourexperience in States. Anyway in whatever path you have chosen, I wish you g'luck.

    Uni

    Par:-VladimirApr 09, 2012

    Yuri, I am not sure what possessed you to write this article in the first place, if not a touch of vanity. Be that as itmay, you omitted something crucial in your attempt to zero in on your choice of university. I'll offer it to you in theway of a question. Here goes. Does the university make the person or does the person make the university? From aformer lecturer both here and there!

    Study in USA

    Par:-Dr. Murugan Apr 09, 2012

    Hi there, I wonder if you are the son of Mr. Gerard Sanspeur that I have know when I use to come and practice oncein a while in MRU. However, I have read your article and it is indeed very relevent to any students that areinterested in studying overseas. It is not exactly clear as to what you are interested in studying. It seems that youhave been accepted by many great universities but you did not mention by which what faculty that you wereaccepted. I feel it is most important for any student to know exactly what he/she wants to study and then search theuniversity that is most recognized in the field of interest. The selection of a university for undergraduate studiesdepend on your financial freedom. As Ivy leagues schools are very expensive as compare to some less famous

    institution. I feel that at the undergraduate level any reasonable and affordable school would be acceptable. Then itis most important to select good schools if you want to do your MSc, MBA or PhD's. Good luck in your search.