I was going to suggest WC. Definitely not an everything school, but lovely experience for the right kid. |
| Dickinson |
| Ohio University |
| Can confirm, Scranton, St. Joe's, Dayton, all Jesuit (or maybe Catholic) schools that have happy kids and very solid academics. My kids go to Catholic school and these are popular picks. So is Fairfield, but that is a little more selective. |
| Sounds like it's mostly slacs |
Are you responding to a specific post? (Mid-size universities like the Jesuit ones are not LACs) |
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Fordham University was a gem when we were touring schools. School in the Bronx and lovely campus and kids.
I was also shocked by the nice factor of Colorado State. (Have one kid considering it for a sport and it was really nice). |
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How is anyone defining a "hidden gem"?
To me, it is a school that punches above its weight with jobs and recruiting and is not necessarily well known. Rose Hulman seems to fit this description. Honestly, I don't care if Dayton or Scranton have solid academics if the career outcomes suck. |
| Kalamazoo |
Really? UC Santa Barbara, San Diego, and Davis would be a "safety" for an out of state student? |
Dayton is Marianist, not Jesuit. But I can confirm it's a gem. |
I suppose there’s some self-selection, but 90% of kids who apply to Davis from our east coast high school get in. UCSB and UCSD are somewhat harder, but much easier than Cal/UCLA. I think everyone gets into UCSC. They’re all far away and expensive, as state schools go, and they don’t have football and you don’t get an answer until March. But if you don’t mind all that, they’re highly ranked and the weather is gorgeous. |
SD and Davis do---Div. 1 FCS |
OP asks: "What's your favorite safety or low target? A place you think is underrated, or an easier admit from here because of geography. A place with new and exciting growth, or an old reliable that doesn't get the ink. A school that blew you away during a tour, or you think will be impossible to get into in 10 years." |