This. Probably not Hillsdale, Liberty or Oral Roberts, but beyond that, her chances of finding her tribe and feeling safe are pretty good. |
The question made me laugh. Isn’t the whole point of college to be a lesbian? Anywhere other than Liberty will be great. The most welcoming 4 years of her life, I predict. |
THIS. Unfortunately she still has to face the morons in adulthood. |
Vassar. My SIL went there, I don't think there's a straight person there. |
I would steer clear of Catholic colleges. |
So, not very diverse? |
Oh shut up |
You waste everyone's timme when you post stupid remarks like this. Irrelevant |
Even Salve Regina? |
BU the Catholic university? |
For parents who went to college in the 80s and 90s, it is an enormous change, but the kids (vast majority anyway) truly don't care. LGBTQ kids are everywhere and go everywhere. I agree with the advice to avoid very religious schools, but that's pretty obvious. I also agree with the poster who wrote about small SLACs in small towns. They will be very supportive places, but there is a chance of the community being small and having its own dynamic. But even there, it's not like the old days of women's colleges, Wesleyan, Oberlin , and Carleton being the safe spaces among small schools and everywhere else being a risk. |
I think this is a conservative stat bc the lgbtqia+ umbrella is just adding more and more to the alphabet such that it includes every possible “category” of identity that is not Cis-gender hetero. And teens like to be “unique” while still fitting in. Being cis-gender hetero is very out and too “normal” these days. |
BU is not Catholic. Perhaps you have confused it with BC. |
No, it’s the constant adding of UVA to threads on Ivy League schools or SLACs or other questions that UVA doesn’t fit in that are irrelevant. |
UMiami |