I think that’s Cornell based on % of the population |
| Mainstream doesn't go Ivy |
| Cornell is huge and has something for everyone. Brown isn't nearly as quirky as it used to be. |
Is it hard to find close community at Cornell due to the size? |
You like getting totally useless info. Really can't make this shit up. |
My kid in Greek life and found it. Very social - sometimes too social imo |
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The main distinction on the social side of things is that Brown has no real Greek scene, whereas both Cornell and esp Dartmouth do.
My DC is at Brown and the kids themselves are more or less the same as everywhere else: more liberal, politically, than Dartmouth of course but otherwise the campus is full of pre-med, CS and pre-finance kids (at Brown that means APMA + econ double concentrators). I would wager Dartmouth is the "quirkier" of the 3, in the paradoxical sense of a student body that departs from the elite college norm. But even Dartmouth has, from what I gather, changed considerably since the 1980s (when all of these schools seemed to have acquired their respective "reputations"). |
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Have you been to Dartmouth recently? So far from that party scene - the social kids are bored to death. |
| So different, you need to visit. I would say you named the top 3 quirky schools for intellectual kids |
| Brown (PLME? Would be best). Sure it can skew pretty quirky, but the athletes and the social crowd aren’t really part of that |
| Brown is roughly 40% LGBTQ, so that is part of the quirky reputation. |
We went to Cornell’s admitted students day recently, and it did not feel quirky at all. Intellectual yes. |
Can you elaborate on this? |
| Brown was never as quirky as its reputation. Like it might, at one point, have been a Grateful Dead/Phish type school, but it was always the prep school Dead crowd, not the hard druggies or activist types. These days I don't believe it's even that, just normal smart kids with an ever so slight air of non-conformism thanks to the open curriculum. |