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B+/A- student in primarily honors/AP classes (though not in math). 1300 PSAT. Co-founded student hunger charity that has since spread to other towns. Captain of track team. Student council co-president for grade. Wants to major in politics/government. Strong interest in political organizing. Wants a small, politically active college.
Choices in order of reach Wesleyan Wellesley Mount Holyoke Sarah Lawrence Reed Lewis & Clark What else? Did not like the vibe at Smith College, also considering Pitzer but have heard mixed things about livability. |
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bryn-mawr?
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The Midwestern SLACs- Oberlin, Kenyon, Macalester. |
| Vassar? |
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Brandeis
Connecticut College |
Seconding Mac. She sounds a lot like my cousin who will graduate from there soon. |
| UDC |
B+/A- seems pretty low. Is this private? Where in class? Think you are ranking Reed too low; they might think kid can’t handle the intense work. Wesleyan and Wellesley? Would not recommend, even for ED. Without knowing more, would go with Mount Holyoke ED1… |
| Thirding Macalester. My kid is there now; I attended one of the schools on your initial list. Mac is located in the state capitaal, which positions political science students well for internships. The vibe is much like the other schools in your list but, in my opinion, a little friendlier than some of them. And they offer decent merit aid. |
Must be ED1 though… |
| She should really consider GW. I know it's bigger, but it would check a lot of boxes. |
I was about to same thing about Reed’s placement on this list. It’s down to 25% admit rate, average SAT ~1400, average HS gpa 4.0 (whatever that means.) https://www.reed.edu/ir/admission.html |
| Another vote for Macalester. It was the second choice for my kid at Wesleyan. Seems to attract similar types of students. |
You must be in Maryland. Not all publics have grade inflation 🙄 |
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Grinnell
Earlham Wooster Oberlin American |