The idea that such a rigid hierarchy exists among such schools is ridiculous. This forum is devoted to USNWR rankings while also constantly complaining about it. If you consider selectivity, yield, and cross-admit selection, the ranking would be the inverse: Pomona, Swat, Amherst, Williams. Personally, I think each of those schools offers something special that makes it the right school for the right student. I'd probably add Wellesley and Bowdoin to the group, although it'd make for a clunky acronym. Anyhow, choosing one over another because of some unarticulated sense of prestige is a recipe for a potentially unhappy college experience. Thankfully, I think most of the kids who go to top LACs have eschewed the idea of pursuing maximal prestige because anyone who gets into a WASP-level school probably had a number of better-known T20 options. |
| honestly the actual difference between williams and wesleyan is minimal - it’s just the prestige chasers on DCUM who inflate and exaggerate any perceived reputational variance - they are both new england liberal arts colleges with strong rigor and loyal alumni groups |
| No idea how to judge "better," but there's a ton of info on Wes's class profile page, if you're trying to get a sense of who is admitted/attends: https://www.wesleyan.edu/admission/apply/class-profile.html |
| Wesleyan is probably mildly more prestigious among the status obsessed crowd. More connected to the elite for sure. Nothing like the wasp schools but more than Lafayette. But Wesleyan is definitely also a small school haven for the progressive rich prep school set. Very small. Super liberal. Wouldn’t be my choice for my kid and I’m a Democrat. |
She sounds very much like my DD's friend who goes there. Smart, possibly interested in law school, sporty but did not want to pursue in college. She's very happy. |
Thanks! |
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DD is super into sports, both playing and watching. She’s academically interested in history and policy/politics/government. Leans progressive but is not at all political or activist in personality. (Steering clear of schools that attract a protest-oriented student body.)>> My DD was an athlete at Lafayette. She still tight with her teammates. For similar schools, it seems that the teams pair socially. Field hockey team and men’s soccer may have parties together. Or FH and Baseball. Not sure if that impacts your DD but it is another datapoint. |
It may not have quite the intellectual vibe of Wesleyan or Swarthmore, but Bucknell has a far stronger Wall Street pipeline than either (or Lafayette, for that matter). Firms hoover up Bucknell grads for client-facing roles because they tend to have both elite quantitative and problem-solving skills, and preternatural EQ and persuasive ability. Plus the network on The Street is legion, and Bison help Bison. |
This just remarkably untrue, and both Wesleyan and swarthmore place more (and those numbers are very small) into careers on the street. Can you point to one source that proves otherwise? |
Wesleyan is bigger than Lafayette: 3200 (including 200+ grad students) vs 2700. |
ding ding! found the middlebury detractor. Sorry your kid got rejected. Should have applied ED. |
This “insult” is so tired. |
I agree the reputation is different but I don't think the (essentially identical) stats back it up. To some extent Wes is coasting on the high reputation it had in the 80s and 90s. |
Please stop. https://www.wesleyan.edu/admission/apply/class-profile.html https://about.lafayette.edu/lafayette-at-a-glance/class-profile/ |
PP you are quoting. The stats are NOT identical! 71% vs 45%. At Wesleyan 29% likely have lower scores whereas ay Lafayette likely 55%. |