Exactly. There are levels to this. |
| Evergreen State |
| Visit campus and you'll quickly determine whether you would consider it a good fit. |
OP states that DC wants an environmental related degree and to be out in nature quite a bit; That does not typically describe W&L. It's a good school, just not in that way. |
No, these are all schools in a similar region with a decidedly environmental focus. Has nothing to do with scores or grades. W&L is fine if you want a selective private with a good frat scene; if you don't want a selective private, then lots of doors open up for environmental related degrees. Warren Wilson is known for that. |
This is good advice. My DD knew right away it was not on her short list. Way too much like her high school: preppy, southern, conservative, and social hierarchy heavy. I know several kids who went and they were all amazing students but they all grew up in the southern country club set. |
That actually is what W&L is. |
+1 The W&L boosters don't understand there is more to this than stats. |
|
The people that jump on here with outdated opinions they know nothing about. W&L actually has an excellent environmental science program. The largest geographic proportion is from the Mid-Atlantic (21%) vs. 19% southeast, 17% Virginia. Stop making things up or things you heard 10 years ago.
https://my.wlu.edu/environmental-studies-program
|
Normally, high Greek percentage is not associated with a crunchy outdoor vibe.
|
OP, the mention of Evergreen State wasn't a joke. The campus is in a forest and it one of the most unique learning environments out there. https://www.evergreen.edu/ |
Well, there is Dartmouth. W and L does have a ton of outdoorsy kids, sorry that is inconsistent with your preconceptions. Op, please visit and draw your own conclusions. |
The OP's kid is interested in W&L and you're suggesting Evergreen State? That's like saying to an Oberlin hopeful, "Once you finish your campus visit, drive on up and check out Hillsdale." |
No, the OP stated below in the original post: "I haven't heard much about this one. I know it is Greek heavy, but would it be worth checking out for an outdoorsy non-preppy kid who loves the Shenandoah valley /appalachian landscape and wants to study environmental science, geoscience, etc at a SLAC/small university? We are not in VA, but W&L is closer for us than schools in the northeast" Everything about Evergreen State is what OP's kid likes just not in Shenandoah Valley set in an immersive learning environment that gives a student the freedom to design their own coursework. |
Maybe you don’t understand what crunchy means. |