Of course not, but the whole point of the exercise was to tear down some actual T20 schools and boost some at the bottom of the T20 and some non-T20 schools. |
At least academically Harvard seems relaxed as well |
| Vanderbilt! |
I don’t know what that “requirement” is but, yes, some of the above are top 20 SLACs. OPs criteria means that, except for the 3-4 national universities mentioned, SLACs are the way to go. Would not recommend Swarthmore (a grind) or military academies (not SLACs in any event) but all other schools on that top 20 or so SLAC list will fit the bill. |
Haverford and Wesleyan are both too 20 SLACs. Admission to Haverford, in particular, is tough. It’s a very rigorous school but it’s also super collaborative. Students at both seem happy. |
My patients include a lot of military academy students. I respectfully disagree that all of them should be avoided due to "grim" conditions. In particular, the Air Force Academy and the Coast Guard strike me as places that foster a sense of wonder and even fun at times, based on my 1st person conversations with their students. These young adults seem genuinely happy. USAFA is an excellent place for engineering and I know multiple young people who LOVE their positions in US Space Force, if that's of interest. USNA sounds more intense for current students, but damn if they don't have close friends. I have no opinion on West Point and I'd have to agree with PP that the Marines should probably be avoided if one is looking for balance .... |
Unless you are a music student, Div 1 baseball recruit or a Child Development major, no! Disagree! |
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Hopkins is fantastic for the humanities. You obviously know nothing about it. |
OP’s kid wants to study humanities, so military academies are out. Don’t know if these schools are grim or not; my point is that they are not SLACs and don’t belong on the SLAC list. |
SLACs could be quite grim if they are lacking in the diversity of some top T20 schools (can't offer the same financial aid) or people find a lack of intellectual viewpoints at schools where a far-left orthodoxy has completely taken hold. In addition, some SLACs are in very cold and remote locations, which can seem isolating. |
DC is always underwater with work at Yale, and the expectations from professors and from the students themselves are high. But the environment is rich with stimulation, and the kids love it there. They have a good time too, without alcohol if that is not your thing. |
I know it very well, and I know some humanities departments are very good. I also know it is a terrible thing for humanities kids to be surrounded by students who are pre-med grinds. Undergraduate study is about the student experience. All top schools have good, well-resourced departments; it is not the academics that are at issue, but the campus climate created by an overwhelming majority of students with no shared intellectual interests. |
Because the 'life of the mind' does not include trying to learn physics or chemistry or engineering, right? The life of the mind does not include facility with math or interest in biology, right? |
Say you don’t have a humanities kid and did not major in humanities without saying you don’t have a humanities kid and did not major in humanities… |