| Williams, the students were obnoxious. |
| We all loved Colorado College. The two student tour guides were delightfully dorky, even the one that was a varsity athlete. DS said he could really see himself being friends with them. The location is incredible and the block plan is great for the right student. |
And lots of professors actually prefer a good chalkboard, like for writing out equations. |
so pretty - but admission session was very blah, then the tour was this guy who kept saying how really impossible it was to get in - and also the kids there were POPULAR and SOCIAL and EMPLOYABLE and COULD LOOK PEOPLE IN THE EYES unlike all the other Ivy League schools (I guess those Princeton and Harvard kids aren't popular or employable). Then we had lunch and - nothing changed my kids' minds. It was a v pretty day and a pretty campus in a pretty corner of the world |
| My kid loved Penn. We had a great tour guide, the campus felt vibrant and kids looked engaged. We visited again to be sure, and had another great experience. I was pleasantly surprised. On the other side, kid hated tufts and couldn't wait to leave. They also disliked northeastern and BU. I personally liked hopkins- the campus was nicer than I expected but the vibe/culture isn't right for my kid. |
|
Our Georgetown tour guide talked about the high percent of GU alum who marry each other, then she made a cringey joke about coming to college to get her diploma and a ring. I'm actually an alum who married another alum, but the whole thing made me roll my eyes.
Likewise a different Georgetown tour guide who, when asked why he chose Georgetown said something about it having a strong pre-med program, which I took to mean he didn't get into wherever else he applied. Also did not like the U Penn tour, which did not take us into a single building other than the admissions office and the tour guides seemed supremely uninterested in the people on the tour. |
| I have a very average kid (not DCUM average) and have found some lovely nurturing places for kids who don’t have 4.8 GPAs an 10 APs and may benefit from some more personal attention and support. Very pleasantly surprised with Randolph-Macon and Christopher Newport, and because my kid wants to study a language not always taught, looked at Elizabethtown in PA. We were very impressed at how they had tracked his interest and a professor of that language spent a whole hour on a personal session just for him. |
Can you explain the bolded? |
I went to Georgetown. It's fine for pre-med, but so are a bunch of other colleges on the East Coast. I don't see that as a distinguishing aspect of the school in the same way that the DC location might be, for instance. |
Thanks, that makes sense |
Williams alum here. I’m sorry your Williams tour wasn’t great. When I looked toured decades ago, my parents and I were so impressed by how nice and friendly everyone there was. My kid wasn’t crazy about our Williams tour though. They enjoyed their tours of Wake, Richmond, and Davidson though. |
"vast happenings on grounds"... not really making the case here.
DP |
DP. We saw the remnants of a big fire right up to the school property when we were there last year. But the school itself was not burned. |
We wound up getting very personalized tours at the smaller schools we visited. We visited Randolph (the former women’s college sister to RMC) during private college week in the summer. They took us to the ice cream place just outside one of the gates during the general tour. Also, because my daughter was interested in a specific performing art, after everyone else left, a professor took us to see those facilities. 2 other schools basically planned a day just for my daughter, including a couple sample classes to get a feel for the program of interest. The school she eventually chose sent us on a tour with a guide that was doubling in the two fields my daughter planned to combine. It really does feel much more personalized and special. |
we had a similar tour at ND. it's off putting when a tour guide puts down another college. bad form |