 I chose the Ford School because it's a perfect total package for me. I really, when I went to grad school, I really wanted to have a community of peers. So much about your choice of graduate school is who you're learning with alongside and I visited a bunch of schools and the Ford School, for me, had just a really unique special place where it's really like a large family and that was very appealing to me. I have lifelong friends. I actually met my husband in graduate school, so what more can I say? And our daughter goes here and it was just just a great, really supportive. I also loved the diversity. I thought it was incredibly inclusive of all types, no matter where you came from, which was a little bit different than my East Coast undergrad experience, so I really like that. I think Ford is very collaborative. I really appreciate it. It's not competitive, I think, because we're all interested in different types of policy and we're all looking for different types of jobs afterwards and we're all coming from different backgrounds. Some students had a had a strong quantitative background and others were bringing more qualitative experiences and interests. It was a really nice mix and you got to benefit from all of those sets. As a student, it certainly, especially as a student studying public policy, Michigan is a really interesting place to study policy because you have the city of Detroit, which is dealing with a lot of governance and fiscal issues and poverty. And then you're based in this town Ann Arbor, which is just incredible and has tons of resources, so it's a very interesting place to study policy and think about these issues. I just remember just immediately and making friends very quickly with these people who all cared about the same and just whatever their issue area was, we're really passionate about it. I wanted to kind of improve the world and make change and a lot of Ford School people have stayed my closest friends in my years since.