At our public suburban school, the numbers look like that for ALL top 30 schools last year. 1/50 for Harvard. 2/60 for Cornell. 1/25 for Georgetown. 1/20 for Colgate. And half of these applicants have 1500+ SAT and 5.0 GPAs. I actually don’t understand why kids keep applying to these colleges that have no interest in them. |
Thanks for this. My google skills are terrible at finding the FL requirement at specific colleges. |
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Colgate is much smaller and more rural than BC and Lehigh. I’d eliminate that one (since I would guess your son’s slight pref is medium sized and not in midd of nowhere, based on his two other too choices). Then I’d apply to BC ED1, and Lehigh ED2.
You didn’t ask this, but Franklin and Marshall would make a good back up- it is small like Colgate and similar vibe, v strong in finance/business placements, and there is a little more going on in Lancaster than a typical LAC setting. |
Colgate Lehigh and BC are all smallish schools with D1 sports and active Greek (or equivalent) life. It seems like OP’s kid actually wants bro culture |
Lehigh community on wall street is almost cult-like - they take care of their own haven’t come across enough BC alumns on the street to have an opinion of their community and alumn help |
DP. Undergrad enrollment Colgate 3130 Lehigh 7394 BC 9982 F&M 1990 BC and Lehigh are not small. My guess is that Colgate is on the small side of what OP wants, which is a medium-sized private. I agree with the PP, ED1 to BC and ED2 to Lehigh. |
Can you elaborate on BC? I know it doesn't have Greek life, but what do you mean by "equivalent"? It's actually the school I've been subtly pushing, precisely because it *doesn't* have fraternities? Is the bro culture there any different from, say, Georgetown (which I am quite familiar with)? Thank you. |
Being a research university vs an undergraduate college or not is NOT what defines being a Liberal Arts school. The focus of the curriculum does. |
When I went (many years ago) there was a FL requirement for BC Core but when I look online now I don't see one |
BC does not have Greek like culture. |
This was one of the reasons I chose BC. I was very happy with it. It is a very social school but far more inclusive without Greek. Because of the way housing is set up, you really get to know your class well. Students want to live on campus and because of the seniority system you almost always live in a dorm filled with students from your own year (freshmen, sophomore, senior). For students who get 3 years housing - they choose to live off campus Junior year and return for Senior (best housing - plus another benefit that leaving campus Junior year means having no RA while you are still likely under 21 - most big parties are hosted at Junior apartments). |
The C is for college. Universities are not LACs |
you don't get it - but that's ok |
So you are focusing on the C, while Boston College is a University. You are missing the point - BC's curriculum (as with all other Jesuit colleges and universities) is absolutely a Liberal Arts school - EVEN in the Cchool of Management (which leaves not much room for pure electives, by the way) . There are many other universities where one can go to business school that will not be liberal arts. |
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To clarify a number of posts, there are the liberal arts and there are Liberal Arts Colleges (LACs). The Carnegie classification for BC is R1 research university. BC may have a core curriculum with a focus in liberal arts (hey, so do UChicago and Columbia), but it is not an LAC.
The core curriculum at BC consists of: 1 arts, 1 cultural diversity (can overlap), 2 history, 1 literature, 1 math, 2 natural science, 2 philosophy, 2 social science (econ usually covers these for business majors), 2 theology, 1 writing Many schools have gen ed requirements that include history, writing, natural science, etc. BC's core is a little bit heavier than some, with philosophy and theology, but not terribly different otherwise. |