UMBC is a good option for STEM. Especially strong in cybersecurity, not surprising since NSA is almost next door. I have no information on other majors. |
This falls really flat. Most educated Californians know about the Claremont Colleges, just most also want to go to big state schools that are cheap. Taxes are too high to be spending $100,000 at Claremont McKenna. |
| Outside of the us, St Andrews. Alumni network in the US growing rapidly and will soon have the largest alumni network of any UK/EU school in the US. |
Go Bobcats!! Great experience. Not too far a drive from DMV. Or flights into Columbus (cheap from BWI), and a university van pick-up. Love this school. DIV 1 sports, lots of school spirit. We consider it a plus that there's little greek life. |
| Rollins! |
| Rose Hulman--excellent undergraduate engineering school in Terre Haute, Indiana. Always highly ranked but little known in DMV |
| Colorado State is definitely a hidden gem for the East Coasters. Great campus, happy kids, great town (Disney modeled their downtown off Fort Collins) and great environmental science, occupational therapy, zoology, animal sciences, business and engineering. |
+1 |
School is mentioned in nearly every thread pertaining to SLACs. |
| Everything is a hidden gem when a parent first comes across it. |
OU is also very generous with merit aid and alumni's kids get in state tuition. They have a lot of 4+1 programs and a very strong nursing and early ed program. They are ranked as an R1 university so there are lots of undergrad research opportunities for science students. Our kid mid-stats kid is going and it is going to be significantly less than Towson or UMBC in state. Totally a hidden gem if your kid is looking for a typical on campus experience, rah-rah school and is OK in a rural area. |
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Colorado School of Mines.
Not unheard of, but our feeder HS had their first kid go there this year, which baffles me. Great education, not too hard to get into, outcomes matching many "better" schools, merit aid |
+1 for Denison |
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There are a bunch of really solid little liberal arts colleges in PA that most people don't know about: Dickinson, Franklin & Marshall, Juniata, Susquehanna, Allegheny, Gettysburg
There are also some little liberal arts colleges in PA that are NOT solid, like Albright and Seton Hill. So this post is not a general plug for PA liberal arts colleges but for the specific ones I named, that are real places of learning and deliver good outcomes to motivated students. |
For me personally- so true! Have been impressed with every school. But to add to the conversation, Clark University really impressed! |