As best I can tell someone didn’t make the dean’s list at their college so proceeded to very scientifically deduce the racial identities of those students merely by looking at names. (The irony!) I wouldn’t expect that to work for Black students, and the Asian total they cite is something like triple the % Asian in the general population. |
TBH, don't go to a LAC if you want to do elite climbing. Utah and CU Boulder are the best bets. Even if you just want to do collegiate level, it might be difficult to find a club that has the level of climbing you want. Westminster in SLC might work - but I don't think they have a competing team or send many, if any, to elite comps. On the East Coast I saw Pitt well-represented (again not a small LAC). UVM also has a good climbing club. University of Denver also has a decent climbing club (and is a decent LAC). Seattle University has decent representation. So does University of San Diego. |
| Bowdoin, Hamilton, Juniata. |
| Kind of a sleeper, but Wesleyan has decent climbing nearby (Ragged Mountain, Rattlesnake for bouldering, etc) and the Gunks are only 2 hours away. Plus a lot of climbing gyms in the Hartford area. My kid is a climber and has found a good community there. |
| Bates, Bowdoin, Colby, Middlebury, Colorado College, Carleton College. |
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The site linked below offers several suggestions. In the Northeast, for example, it includes these LACs:
Bowdoin Middlebury Colby Bates Williams Hamilton St. Lawrence For ideas further from this cluster, recommendations such as Colorado College and the University of Puget Sound appear. https://www.collegexpress.com/lists/list/the-experts-choice-colleges-for-the-outdoorsy-student/740/ Regarding your son's interest in a quantitative social science, he may benefit from considering colleges with an available major in data science. Through this major he could choose a social science of interest as his "applied domain." |
| Carleton alum here. I prefer mountains, or at least small mountains, in my nature. I would recommend Dartmouth, Midd, Williams, or the Maine LACs. |
You went the wrong direction if you’re looking for the best mountains. |
None of op’s post mentions them wanting to go to an elite climbing program. |
| Pepperdine |
Not a liberal arts colleges. |
If course it is…..85% of undergrads at Pepperdine are at Seavers College…..do your research…. |
It is not a liberal arts college, then. Thank you for proving the point. |
Both of you are wrong. 100% of Pepperdine undergrads are at the Seavers College. A Liberal Arts college…. |
| Connecticut College has a great arboretum and a lot of outdoorsy kids. The botany and environmental studies majors are popular, and there are classes where students go outside a lot. There is a watershed close by. The campus is pretty and overlooks the Long Island Sound. No Greek life. |