Michigan vs Penn
Posted: Wed May 24, 2017 1:32 pm
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Michigan is the much better choice in a vacuum. Only you can value the SO thing though.natlaw22 wrote:Total COA at Michigan ~$150k after 10 years of loan repayment ($90k scholarship)
Total COA at Penn ~$250k after 10 years of loan repayment ($40k scholarship)
Goals: Big law for a few years preferably in DC. Potentially want to clerk. Interested in environmental law.
SO is applying to phd programs in clinical psych next year and believes Penn would be better in terms school choices nearby. I visited Ann Arbor and loved it, but am from Florida and have never lived in the cold (though I think philly would be pretty cold too). I'm visiting Philly in 2 weeks.
Thanks for the help!!
As an undergrad at Mich I can say that our psych department is extremely good and not easy to get into the PhD program. However, the state of Michigan has an enormous public university system and I'm sure that there are solid PhD programs around. My roommate's mom has a PhD in linguistics from Wayne State University. There's also Michigan State, Eastern/Western/Central Michigan, Grand Valley State, Detroit-Mercy (not sure if public but it's there), and I'm sure there are others I'm not thinking of.guybourdin wrote:Penn is definitely better in terms of "school choices nearby" because there aren't really other schools nearby Michigan, but could your SO not go to Michigan? Do they not have a (good) clinical phd program?
I'm not well versed in PhD programs in this field, so someone who is can correct me if I'm wrong. But if it's anything like other graduate programs, the difference between Michigan and Michigan State is like the difference between... Michigan and Michigan State for law school.mwells56 wrote:As an undergrad at Mich I can say that our psych department is extremely good and not easy to get into the PhD program. However, the state of Michigan has an enormous public university system and I'm sure that there are solid PhD programs around.
From the people I know that have gotten/are trying to get PhD's, it's a lot different than trying to go to like med school/law school. Each school only accepts a handful (like, 5 or something) a year because they're university employees and get paid to research/teach while they work towards their degree. So I would imagine that even a wide gap between two schools is narrower than it may seem.cavalier1138 wrote:I'm not well versed in PhD programs in this field, so someone who is can correct me if I'm wrong. But if it's anything like other graduate programs, the difference between Michigan and Michigan State is like the difference between... Michigan and Michigan State for law school.mwells56 wrote:As an undergrad at Mich I can say that our psych department is extremely good and not easy to get into the PhD program. However, the state of Michigan has an enormous public university system and I'm sure that there are solid PhD programs around.
no PhD programs are much more specific, it's not analogous at all to law schools, only people in the fields actually know what is good or notcavalier1138 wrote:I'm not well versed in PhD programs in this field, so someone who is can correct me if I'm wrong. But if it's anything like other graduate programs, the difference between Michigan and Michigan State is like the difference between... Michigan and Michigan State for law school.mwells56 wrote:As an undergrad at Mich I can say that our psych department is extremely good and not easy to get into the PhD program. However, the state of Michigan has an enormous public university system and I'm sure that there are solid PhD programs around.
I didn't mean analogous in the sense that it follows the same ranking system. I meant analogous in the sense that it's irrelevant if Michigan (the state) has five different schools offering this particular doctorate. What's relevant is how good the programs are. The analogy to the law school rankings was to point out how silly it would be to say that Michigan is an awesome state for law schools because if you can't get in to Michigan, you have Michigan State and Cooley to fall back on.Borhas wrote:no PhD programs are much more specific, it's not analogous at all to law schools, only people in the fields actually know what is good or notcavalier1138 wrote:I'm not well versed in PhD programs in this field, so someone who is can correct me if I'm wrong. But if it's anything like other graduate programs, the difference between Michigan and Michigan State is like the difference between... Michigan and Michigan State for law school.mwells56 wrote:As an undergrad at Mich I can say that our psych department is extremely good and not easy to get into the PhD program. However, the state of Michigan has an enormous public university system and I'm sure that there are solid PhD programs around.
SO probably knows best which programs are better or not
Agree with this. Can't do math for you re: personal things, but it's pretty clear that Penn, while safer than Michigan, is not worth a hundred grand more. Considering lifetime interest costs on top of the $250k at Penn, that's just way too much money unless you're independently wealthy.rpupkin wrote:Sorry, no one on TLS can assess your SO's decision or put a dollar amount on the value of your relationship with your SO. But without the SO factor, the answer for you is: Michigan and it's not close.
Except that's not what I was saying. All I meant were that multiple options might be there, and that it's something to look into. I'm also pretty sure that for something like PhD's it's more important just to have one as opposed to where it's from (unlike law school). Not positive though.cavalier1138 wrote:I didn't mean analogous in the sense that it follows the same ranking system. I meant analogous in the sense that it's irrelevant if Michigan (the state) has five different schools offering this particular doctorate. What's relevant is how good the programs are. The analogy to the law school rankings was to point out how silly it would be to say that Michigan is an awesome state for law schools because if you can't get in to Michigan, you have Michigan State and Cooley to fall back on.Borhas wrote:no PhD programs are much more specific, it's not analogous at all to law schools, only people in the fields actually know what is good or notcavalier1138 wrote:I'm not well versed in PhD programs in this field, so someone who is can correct me if I'm wrong. But if it's anything like other graduate programs, the difference between Michigan and Michigan State is like the difference between... Michigan and Michigan State for law school.mwells56 wrote:As an undergrad at Mich I can say that our psych department is extremely good and not easy to get into the PhD program. However, the state of Michigan has an enormous public university system and I'm sure that there are solid PhD programs around.
SO probably knows best which programs are better or not
As much as this may be field-dependent, that's definitely not true. School pedigree still matters for your doctorate, but some otherwise lackluster schools may have unexpectedly good doctorate programs in specific areas.mwells56 wrote: Except that's not what I was saying. All I meant were that multiple options might be there, and that it's something to look into. I'm also pretty sure that for something like PhD's it's more important just to have one as opposed to where it's from (unlike law school). Not positive though.