+1 Self contained campus on the edge of a city. Immediately surrounded by west end and Hillsboro village, which are safe and have shopping and restaurants. The pancake pantry is a staple. Freshman live on the Peabody quad. Residential college system too. Pretty consistent architecture, and it’s an arboretum. |
Literally so many campuses like Yale. Not clear what you are looking for. |
Lots of crime still in New Haven where Yale students are victims. |
Are you talking about Yale’s Freshman Outdoor Orientation Trips? Caveat they may have a different name now. It was an amazing way to start college. But it doesn’t mean the entire experience is like summer camp. It’s college, not camp. |
As others have mentioned, Vanderbilt, Rice, and Chicago all have somewhat similar vibes. Historic, self-contained campuses that are both a part and separate from their respective cities. Aesthetically, I think Chicago is probably the closest. But the sense of community is probably stronger at Vanderbilt and Rice. And Rice has the residential college system.
Also, maybe Indiana University in Bloomington. Surprisingly nice campus. |
I think OP is pretty interested in the trips. I remember some MBA schools pushing trips before the programs began. I do think there are schools that have stronger orientations & trip-based bonding exercises (not always at the beginning of freshman year). Because quad-based campuses and well-laid-out "collegetowns" are pretty common, maybe it's more useful to focus on recommending schools that have strong orientation programs. |
Plus, when you leave campus, you are in Nashville rather than New Haven. |
How did you conclude that just from a tour? |
Rice has residential colleges, and also a freshman orientation experience that's a full week and is pretty immersive and terrific (no trips, though). In addition, there are "good" restaurants and shopping walkable to campus in Rice Village.
The thing that I think sets it apart is that the residential college system means that freshmen are way more intermingled with upperclassmen for housing/dining than at other colleges. As a freshman, I had lots and lots of sophomores and juniors (and a handful of seniors) I could ask for advice or go to with problems. |
Yes! We loved the idea of kids bonding over things other than alcohol. |
+1 |
For more of a target school, try Franklin and Marshall. They also have the house system |
Yes, thank you. To clarify, we're also looking for target schools- We know Yale is a reach, but we would like to find a similar atmosphere outside of academics. |
Lots of colleges offer the orientation trips. Tufts and Lehigh come to mind. |
Georgetown |