What are they afraid of? I say this as a Colby alum myself. |
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My preference is to look first at SLACs with relatively easy access to a city and/or clustered together: Wesleyan and Wellesley; the Five (now four) College Consortium; Claremont Colleges; the Main Line schools.
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No, some of the LACs that are actually close to a city are: Barnard (in NYC) Swarthmore (30 minutes to Philly) Wellesley (30 minutes to Boston) Reed (30 minutes from Portland) Macalester (in St. Paul/Minn) Oxy (in LA, not an 1hr+ like Claremont gang) Oberlin (30 minutes from Cleveland) Wes is a few hours away from NYC or Boston ... not close to a city IMO. |
Wesleyan? |
Pretty sure that Hartford is a city. |
If Hartford is of interest, there's Trinity. |
| URichmond. Holy Cross in Worcester and 50 minutes to Boston. |
| No one has interest in Trinity. Wellesley is obviously all girls. Haverford and Holy Criss are only 2 in North East. |
No one dreams of going to school in Worcester, MA. |
Those interested can view the underlying source, which extended to 687 schools: https://www.businessinsider.com/the-610-smartest-colleges-in-america-2015-9 |
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Davidson is closer to a city than most of these, but all of you northern snobs don't count Charlotte.
Rhodes is also highly underrated and in Memphis, which admittedly isn't the most exciting place but it has pro sports, concerts, restaurants and a major airport. |
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Haverford
Bryn Mawr A decent sized notch down and further out but Drew as well. |
Test optional engineers do... |
Ok and not all have the same preference. some really like being in a quaint village in a beautiful setting near nature for 4 years. when are they going to get that experience again? |
Exactly. Middlebury is a phenomenal school and will continue to rank higher than Colby. It’s not in the same league at all. That said, I believe Colby is a very good school. Everyone finds their place. |