Expert College Counselor Reviews Duke University
Expert college admissions advisor and educational consultant
Mark Montgomery reviews
Duke University in
Durham, North Carolina, a highly selective, very prestigious college in the southern
United States. With a sprawling campus boasting gorgeous
Neo-Gothic architecture, its graduate schools are held in high esteem, as is its
Division I sports program.
If you seek guidance in the college admissions process and need help selecting the right college for you, contact Mark Montgomery at
http://greatcollegeadvice.com, or call
720.279.7577. His team of experts in college admission, student advising, career counseling, and college counseling can help you with your college applications, your college essays, and with financial aid.
Montgomery Educational Consultants offers personalized educational counseling to students and their families as they navigate the complex process of selecting and applying to colleges and universities.
Since
2006, our company has provided affordable,
Great College Advice to hundreds of students from across the United States and around the world. Our mission is to provide students and families with the highest standard of assistance in the college and graduate school selection and admissions process. We assist students in finding the school that best fits their abilities, interests, and aspirations and guide them as they complete their applications, write their essays, and present themselves in the best light throughout the admissions process.
While we are based in
Denver, Colorado, and
Westfield, New Jersey, our reach isn’t just in these local areas. We serve students nationally and internationally, too. In fact, fully 25% of our clients come from beyond these two states in the
U.S., and another 25% have come from
China,
Singapore,
Taiwan,
India,
France,
Great Britain,
Hong Kong,
Mexico,
Belarus,
Canada,
Romania, and
Oman. No matter where you are located, Montgomery Educational Consulting can assist you in your college and university planning.
TRANSCRIPT:
I’m here today on the campus of Duke University in Durham, North Carolina.
It’s a scorching hot summer day but that hasn’t deterred the students and their families who are visiting campus. There are just loads and loads of tour groups running around. They make it clear on their website, though, that here at
Duke, what we call “demonstrated interest” is really not that important.
Taking a tour, while maybe helpful to get an idea of this beautiful campus, it doesn’t really matter much in terms of admission. They don’t really care whether you’ve been here once or three times or 47 times.
In any case, Duke is an enormous campus. It’s just gigantic in terms of its area. About 6,
500 undergraduates, 13,
000 students overall, and everything your heart desires is here. It is a private university and perhaps the most prestigious university in the
American south. It’s very selective.
Rivals the
Ivies, as well as
Stanford, in terms of the percentage of students it admits and the caliber of students that it admits. As I say, everything your heart desires is here. It’s a beautiful campus; this neo-gothic architecture on the
West Campus.
Fantastic. Although the
Student Center right over here, not as pretty a building on the outside but really nice on the inside. Very functional and very pleasant. Lots of places for students to congregate.
Housing is required of all students for the first three years while they are here. And freshman students live on the
East Campus, which is sort of a little bit further removed. And as I read in one of the guide books, part of that logic may be to shelter students from the wilder aspects of the party atmosphere at Duke. Of course, not everyone is a party animal here, but fraternities and sororities do tend to dominate the social scene.
Something like 30% of men and 40% of women belong to those social groups. And while parties are probably open to everyone, they do tend to help, in some ways, on the positive side to make smaller social groups for students to congregate, as at many large universities, but the down side can be that if you’re not involved in them, then you’ve got to really make your own fun. That’s really where the social scene is dominant. Very similar to
Dartmouth, my alma mater.
Graduate schools of course has the
Fuqua School of Business. Very, very prestigious, well known.
The Duke Medical Center is terrific.
Beautiful buildings, more modern than the neo-gothic architecture of the main
Quad.
All in all, Duke is a fantastic university for students who are serious about either participating in Division I sports or being at a school where spectator sports is important. It is a comprehensive university that has just about anything your heart desires, and are looking for this beautiful campus in the south. It’s really hard to beat.