Yes, and it's only a hop, skip and a jump on the Red Line! Georgetown Prep definitely has a feeder advantage, though. |
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To PP's point, I'm sure it's highly discipline-specific. My sister was scared away by Amherst's grade deflation relative to other peers (admissions rep said average GPA had historically been around 3.1). Three out of the top five students in my Harvard law school class hailed from SLACS- Amherst (2) and Pomona (1).
It seems that learning how to think critically is emphasized across the board at these schools, but the skillset certainly lends itself better to some disciplines- say History or English, where you're coming up with your own analyses and arguments within potentially smaller class settings - than other more quant-focused subjects where there are right and wrong answers, like Math or Chemistry, for instance. |
Ouch. Nastiness. I know a kid that attended Haverford. They came home at Christmas wearing a Penn State sweatshirt and the highlight of their week was driving to Penn States campus for football weekend games. Penn State had a strong program in their major, Haverford didn't but it cost twice as much for a school smaller than their high school. |
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People want/expect different things from college -- grad school admissions, jobs and networks, friends and life partners, good times, an education. Which schools are comparable depend on what you're looking for.
The upper middle class has decided that SLACs are comparable to (some?) Ivies because they can provide similar access to professional schools and an affluent cohort. From an educational standpoint, it's a harder case to make given the vast differences in resources, but most kids aren't looking for a great education (and those who are can usually find it if they're highly motivated) and affluent parents, especially those who have already shelled out beaucoup dollars for pre-collegiate private schooling, are eager to believe that smaller is better, especially when the school has name recognition among their peers. |
| Getting to the subject as schools actually comparable to Harvard, there is an excellent school in China I read an article about recently. Anyone applying from the U.S.? |
Would you give the same advice if physics is the intended major? |
| ^^^Oh for pete's sake. Just go to a school that fits your needs, academically and socially. This is just not that complicated. |
Absolutely: http://www.swarthmore.edu/institutional-research/doctorates-awarded |
This, a thousand times this. I mean, I know several schlubs who graduated from Harvard in my year, and I know millionaires who went to podunk schools. I wish parents would stop mindfucking their kids' college prospects to death. It must suck to be one of those kids. |
+ a zillion!! |
Except, of course, that you felt the need to mention that you "went to school in Boston." |
Sorry. "In my year" meant "in my graduation year." I went to school in a different state, at a different school. I'm talking about my friends, not co-students. |
| Harvard actually is not that good of an undergraduate institution. I'd probably choose it over Haverford -- for the name -- but the education is not great. I discouraged my daughter from even looking there. Who wants to pay all that $$ to be taught by TAs? |
I agree that "how does this school compare to Harvard?" is usually the wrong question to be asking (unless you're actually in a position where you have to choose between Harvard and the other school). But I think that finding a school that meets "your" needs is pretty complicated -- not only because both the kid and the parents are in the mix, but also because there's a lot of decision making under uncertainty (of various kinds) and the information people rely on is really bizarre. IME, the more you know, the more complicated it gets. |
I went to Harvard as an undergrad. Got taught by faculty, a number of whom I got to know quite well. I also really appreciated the presence of grad students -- more people to talk to and learn from! For me, it was a great place to go to college. |