This part. |
Neither of those schools have great ED boosts. Remember Williams has a massive athlete population. Unless you go to a top private school that they have been taking students from for the past 5 years, I would not take that bet. |
We've had no issues and DD goes to Stanford. Sounds like you need to work on planning or have some extreme issue that could've been remedied before choosing an out of state college. |
BS |
Bowdoin has 4 faculty in philosophy. That is a dismal amount, even for a liberal arts college. |
It’s a *very* common overlap. My kid was one of the kids who liked and applied to both. Open curriculum, high-achieving but not competitive, strong artsy/progressive vibe. |
Except the kid wants a LAC, not just the most prestigious school he can get into. Good lord. |
Other than open curriculum, you’re describing really any lac. Even then Amherst is a better option. Also brown has just as much recruiting as other low ivies, so “progressive” is stretching it. |
Why do you say no advantage? |
I don’t even know what point you’re trying to make. The original question was about Wes/Brown overlap. It exists. You might think it shouldn’t, but it does. |
DP. Wes and Brown overlap. Amherst and Pomona also popular with these applicants. |
As an opinion, a department with six or seven faculty suffices to cover the sub-areas of philosophy important to undergraduate study. |
Same at our private. |
Going back to the data, Williams student body has 30% varsity athletes (similar to the other schools on the OPs list) but takes 26% ed. So clearly on the higher end for an ed boost among these schools. |
As a future-looking suggestion, a student interested in philosophy may benefit from keeping the Hamilton College Summer Program in Philosophy in mind.
https://share.google/8Zkdxjh4srHNOA8GQ |