The first two are not the best places to go for physics, even for lacs. I’d put 10 LACs in before Bowdoin is even mentioned |
Very unlikely op’s daughter is getting into any of these. |
Duke. Best physics guy I know went there.
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Harvey mudd is very difficult to get into with a 13% acceptance rate and attracts a very niche personality. Also a terrible student quality of life. Much harder than others lacs to graduate and to do well. |
Wow. How much do they charge per hour for the tutoring? How much is a physics college professor making? |
Ops daughter wants to go into academia so this doesn’t matter. |
The girl I mentioned found it a good fit. Academically challenging but manageable to her. She is also neurodivergent like OP ( autistic), don’t care about partying much. No ECs, ED got her in. |
Neurotic doesn’t mean neurodivergent. |
Im not sure why everyone is recommending $90k/yr SLACs for undergrad. UMD is one of the leaders in quantum physics if that's where her interest lies. https://www.umdphysics.umd.edu/research/research-areas/quantum.html |
One of the smartest people I know went to UMD for undergrad, studied physics and went on to get a PhD in Physics at Harvard. |
Cause a $70k/year out of state public is a waste of money |
Its $55k and about 15-20% of OOS receive some merit. |
60k according to the Maryland website. Still a waste of money at 40k for a public school, just stay in state. |
She’s not interested in a big college |
Are you wealthy OP? Life of an academic is for the 2nd generation wealthy, who can deal with the low pay for years of grad and post doc and lecturer roles. Pay is so so, and it’s very possible they will never make tenure and drift from college to college as lecturer.
Applied physics, like working at JHU-APL, an engineering company, might offer a better career path and lifestyle. |