Reed has no sports — and a super intellectual vibe. |
Your word salad propagates like tribbles. |
good point. what's the east coast version of reed. maybe Sarah Lawrence at one time. before they f'd it up |
And no school is admitting 50% lax bros. |
Great question! Maybe St John’s College in Annapolis? |
Yeah I don't get it. My son is active and athletic but doesn't want to go to a small school like Swat or Pomona to cheer on their ootball team - he'd go for the academics and that's what he'd want to see the investments in. The money would be better appreciated by most LAC students going to renovate dorms and improve AC, hire cooler faculty, some funding for the career centers. |
The schools being discussed are very wealthy, they do not have any budget issues funding athletics. But, they might have future issues if they deprioritize athletics given that athletes at Amherst give at rates almost double that of non athletes and that they out number non athletes 3:1 when it comes to donations above $1 million. |
Swat doesn’t have football so no worries there. The athletes there are, by far, first and foremost students vs athletes. A typical D1 runner was hitting Swat recruiting times when they were in middle school if not earlier. There are many Ivy athletes Swat would not admit because they didn’t have the grades in HS. D3 is very different than even D1 Ivy athletics. |
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I don’t know why American schools are obsessed with sports. It’s insane in my opinion.
In my DD’s American high school every sports achievement was followed up with sone ceremony and public awards while winning a math Olympiad was completely ignored. I don’t think European schools have teams and recruited athletes. They’re more academically oriented. |
Maybe we should question why the student experience seems to be that athletes are the only ones invested in donating to the college or why they earn more than others |
by this logic, many colleges should only have male teams: Gender differences: Research has shown the effect of athletic success on giving can differ by gender. A Princeton University study found that male alumni whose teams had successful seasons while they were undergraduates, or in the years after, subsequently made larger donations to the athletic program. For female alumni, the effect was not statistically significant. or maybe college should be male only since the number of men making donations above $1mm is much larger than the number of women making the donations. by a factor far greater than 3:1 |
Schools wouldn't recruit anywhere near the number of female athletes that they currently do if they weren't required to by Title 9. It is not in their financial interest by any measure. |
There are many European athletes attending American universities as recruited athletes Somewhere along the way they devoted significant time to sport. |
This canard has already been debunked upthread. Tell me, what is the ratio of pre-existing wealth of recruited athlete families compared to the rest of the class? There is your answer. The rich kids will still enroll absent athletics. In any event, Reed’s endowment is just fine, thank you very much. |
Actually, this is another point. Europeans are recruited more than ever. And Europeans don’t donate to schools like Americans do, to sh the least. So not only are these Europeans getting an admit advantage, but if they are upper-middle class (with an equal or higher standard of living than American donut hole families), they will get significant financial aid from these schools. Some of which comes from donut family tuition.,, |