Less popular Hidden Gems

Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:NP-My kid is finishing up 4 years there.

The prison has ZERO impact on students. Most activities are on campus. In fact, when you go into town, you don't see or pass it at all (downtown is in the opposite direction). Same when I drive there from this area.

I think I have seen it twice in her four years, when we had to go to Walmart (you drive by it).

Baltimore has 20 jails and prisons. You pass one (where executions take place) every time you take the shuttle from the Homewood Campus to the Medical Campus. It does not prevent too many people from considering Johns Hopkins.


Baltimore has more crime, too.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:I grew up a few blocks from Muhlenberg. It was always regarded as a top school. My parents dreamed of me going there. But I wanted independence so I went west, Univ. of Utah. Poli Sci+ skiing!


Are you LDS? And if not, did you find that most students were and it was hard to make friends and fit in? I love the idea of living in Utah with all the natural beauty but worry about my kid being ostracized.


I was ostracized, and I’d never live there. My friend was also ostracized for not joining the church. Mormons kids stopped playing with his kids. Mean. He had to move.

As for me, we had to find a national chain hotel and not a locally owned one. The locals would not give us unmarried people a room.
Anonymous

Anonymous wrote:


We drove by it this Fall on the way to NorthWestern. Absolutely gorgeous campus. Slightly closer to Downtown Chicago than Northwestern is, close to the Water. We had a blast getting familiar with Chicago.



Friend's DC going next fall. Had no idea how gorgeous the campus was until I saw pics. If one wants to be in/near a city, seems like a good choice.


Beautiful campus right on the lake with its own L stop. Students get an L pass as part of tuition and are encouraged to see the city. Good pre-med, business programs, and emerging sustainability program. Rogers Park is a quirky location that's great for college kids. Up and coming basketball team.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
If I was the next Governor of MD, I'd focus on trying to make St Mary's College tuition-free in order to lure the state's top students. It's already an honors college, but I think the location does a big disservice to its desirability. Not a lot of 18 year-olds want to go to school at a state university in the middle of rural farmland on the Chesapeake. If the school was free, I think the school would get a lot of looks from students and families.

That school should be similar in caliber and prestige to William & Mary. It's has the capability to get there.


My DD is a freshman there. I don’t think you need to make tuition free to lure top students. Being generous with merit aid should be enough, and is one reason DD is there.

The location is a plus for her. She didn’t want a big city but it’s not as rural as you think. Pax River Naval Air Station is about 10 minutes away and there are some shopping centers and places to eat within a 10 mile radius. Freshmen can have cars on campus, so that makes getting around easier. Also, it’s on the St. Mary’s River, not the Chesapeake.

Our DD likes it and describes it as a “small STEM school”, and less of a classical liberal arts college, which is fine for her since she’s a biochem major.


I guess that's great for freshmen that have cars...not all families can afford that. Maybe instead of free tuition the governor can give free cars, insurance, and gas to each student there?


DP. They have shuttles to the shopping area for those without cars.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:University of Kansas

Yes! Definitely the most underrated U.S. university. Kalamazoo gets my LAC vote.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:I grew up a few blocks from Muhlenberg. It was always regarded as a top school. My parents dreamed of me going there. But I wanted independence so I went west, Univ. of Utah. Poli Sci+ skiing!


Are you LDS? And if not, did you find that most students were and it was hard to make friends and fit in? I love the idea of living in Utah with all the natural beauty but worry about my kid being ostracized.


I was ostracized, and I’d never live there. My friend was also ostracized for not joining the church. Mormons kids stopped playing with his kids. Mean. He had to move.

As for me, we had to find a national chain hotel and not a locally owned one. The locals would not give us unmarried people a room.


Now you're making your own problems. How did this ever even come up? Sounds like you like stirring up stuff and then whining about it after you've started.

NP btw.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:Colleges that are under the radar--that is not oversubscribed but somewhat hidden gems.

I'll go--My DC did not apply but I learnt about Carleton in the process--I like so many things about it!


I just noticed this post is 4 or 5 months old. But Carleton is not hidden. It's a aell known LAC, among the top 10 for sure.
Anonymous
Another vote for Kalamazoo College - a school with fabulous faculty, very loyal
Alums, strong social justice programs - all in a great town!
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:Another vote for Kalamazoo College - a school with fabulous faculty, very loyal
Alums, strong social justice programs - all in a great town!


Also, in case you are looking for hidden gems, I can report that Kalamazoo - which looked really impressive and has an incredibly interesting curriculum/career/personal development plan that dates back decades that looks a lot like most other similar schools are only now trying to do -- gives a *lot* of merit aid, even to students who don't have the strongest stats. Best merit aid of all the similarly situated colleges we applied to (think over $40K).It was so incredibly reasonably priced with merit aid for my DC that it was hard to turn down. Looked very diverse, inclusive, interesting, nice small city with good internships, strong study abroad, etc.
Anonymous
This is a hugely entertaining thread - hearing that Claremont McKenna and Carleton are hidden gems is hilarious. Almost as funny as the person that suggested more folks would hire from Alabama than one of the most selective colleges in the country. Maybe if you are hiring for Walmart…
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:Another vote for Kalamazoo College - a school with fabulous faculty, very loyal
Alums, strong social justice programs - all in a great town!


Also, in case you are looking for hidden gems, I can report that Kalamazoo - which looked really impressive and has an incredibly interesting curriculum/career/personal development plan that dates back decades that looks a lot like most other similar schools are only now trying to do -- gives a *lot* of merit aid, even to students who don't have the strongest stats. Best merit aid of all the similarly situated colleges we applied to (think over $40K).It was so incredibly reasonably priced with merit aid for my DC that it was hard to turn down. Looked very diverse, inclusive, interesting, nice small city with good internships, strong study abroad, etc.


Shout out to the Hornets! Kalamazoo is also an interesting, cute small city - not many still have a downtown these days. There is a university in Kalamazoo - Western Michigan - as well as a large community college so there's a bit more "college town" infrastructure than there would be in a city with only a LAC.

DC got a large merit offer, though ended up turning down for their ED. DC was thrilled to have gotten in soon after submitting EA application and said would probably have gone if not for getting into another Midwestern LAC.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:This is a hugely entertaining thread - hearing that Claremont McKenna and Carleton are hidden gems is hilarious. Almost as funny as the person that suggested more folks would hire from Alabama than one of the most selective colleges in the country. Maybe if you are hiring for Walmart…


YES. Starting with the title of the thread..."Less popular hidden..." not to be confused with "Popular hidden", "Less popular visible" or "Popular visible"
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:NP-My kid is finishing up 4 years there.

The prison has ZERO impact on students. Most activities are on campus. In fact, when you go into town, you don't see or pass it at all (downtown is in the opposite direction). Same when I drive there from this area.

I think I have seen it twice in her four years, when we had to go to Walmart (you drive by it).

Baltimore has 20 jails and prisons. You pass one (where executions take place) every time you take the shuttle from the Homewood Campus to the Medical Campus. It does not prevent too many people from considering Johns Hopkins.


Baltimore does not have 20 jails and prisons. And you most definitely don't pass one where executions take place because Maryland abolished the death penalty in 2013.


Well the government thinks there are 20 jails/prisons there:

https://www.countyoffice.org/md-baltimore-city-jails-prisons/

When I went there, the bus from Homewood to the medical campus went through the prison grounds (on a street that bisects it) everyday. And I remember seeing death penalty protestors outside the day that an execution was scheduled.

So, my execution detail was dated, but my point that good schools can exist in cities with prisons/jails still stands.


That jail was closed by Hogan during his first term.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:Claremont McKenna. Super underrated here, but top notch academics, great quality of life, internships/opportunities abound, alumni network + top outcomes.


It's super overrated cuz their tendency to lie their stats. Google.
Anonymous
Drake, grinnell, rose Hulman, olin
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