eh. i went to a big b10 school and my sister went to an elite top 5 slac. The network at the slac is better. Sure there are more 'alumni' living from my b10 school but it is really diluted. My sister can cold call or cold email alums and they are willing to talk, go to bat for her, give her advice - that's teh benefit of a small but powerful and proud alum network. Princeton, Wellesley, Dartmouth, Williams all have way better alum networks than any 'large school' in terms of effectiveness. And that's what counts. |
+1. About 20 kids from my high school went to our top state school. There were two of them I didn't even know attended until after we had graduated. One was a high school crush of mine! At the end of senior year he had planned on Georgetown, so I never knew what happenned (money maybe?) but I found his picture in our yearbook years later. I wouldn't worry about high school classmates in a large school. |
agreed Most big schools are focused on grad students and undergrads get the leftovers. |
+1 With alumni networks is quality over quantity |
| DD is a junior. She says, "The bigger the better". She is at MCPS and has never sat in a class of 150 students. I have tried to explain bigger is not necessarily better but she will not hear of it. She want BIG -- Ohio State, Penn State, Alabama. And it seems a lot of her friends are the same way. It is interesting, I went to small school and hubby went to small state flagship. But hey, it's her life. |
Why? Just because you and your husband went to big schools? How is that relevant to what's best for your kids as the individuals (word choice intentional) they are? |
They need your permission and approval? Really? Unless it's a truly disastrously stupid choice, just let them chart their own course through life and live with the consequences. |
| The main advantage of a large school is that they will likely have a number of strong academic departments in the event that your child wants to switch majors. At a small school, especially if it is highly specialized, the options are more limited and a change of major might require transferring elsewhere. |
This. I wanted a gigantic school with lots of strong departments because I had NO IDEA what I wanted to be at 18 years old. I wanted the opportunity to make a mistake with my choice and move to something else with minimal disruption. And...it was great to make out with an occasional stranger at a party and never have to see that person again. |
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Offer all the classes in your major every single semester.
Privacy. |
I've never used my ivy network. Never came up. |
I've used mine. |
can change majors or departments and there actually is another department or major to go to! |
| Navigating life, better preparation. Less hand holding. If you can make it there you can make it anywhere. |
This. Parents tend to direct their kids to (or away from) what they know. I’m an LAC grad and had a good experience so I have to guard against my bias as I do the tours with my kids. So far we’re 2 big, 1 small so I think I’m being fair. Or they’ve tuned me out.
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