Perhaps 2-3 decades ago. Certainly not now. OP, are you open to going abroad? |
The concept is learning for learning -- without a pre-professional bent. Appeals to kids with certain disposition, and also to those who know they intend to go directly on to graduate school before working (law, public policy). |
I was there one decade ago. Is your certainty based on anything? |
Do you have a passion for something like arts and music with no consideration for remuneration, to play at a club or a bookstore for all the books you can read? That’s music for music’s sake. Or Gregory Perelman, who declined the $1 million prize for proving the Poincaré conjecture. Or Jean-Paul Sartre who declined the Nobel Prize in literature. |
Multiple disgusting and anti-intellectual incidents in the last 5 years. |
| I doubt PP has any connection to Midd. |
| St. John's and Carleton. I would look at Kenyon and Grinnell. |
| The students at VCU love to learn. Also agree with U of Chicago. |
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Columbia.
I think any college that still follows a core curriculum (also Chicago) draws that kind of student. |
| University of Chicago and also Oxford. My DC just spent a year there and it was a truly unique intellectual experience all around - nothing like it in the states. |
| Swarthmore |
oh hell no. |
|
What about Oberlin? William & Mary?
We are also looking for a school with an intellectual bent but not a pressure cooker. Is there such a thing? |
Perpetrated by how many Middlebury students? |
If your DC is interested in William and Mary and Oberlin, look at Vassar and Bard as well. Maybe Kenyon too -- great spirit there, very engaged students, but the location is pretty isolated. Maybe St. John's if your DC has a strong interest in the classics and wants the highly prescriptive, classical core curriculum -- it's truly perfect for some students (DC has a friend going there) and not at all right for others, so a prospective student needs to check it out with care. |