Boom. There it is. Facts. |
| for me Williams and Pomona are tops. Amherst feels a little dusty. |
You are about as dim as the poor souls arriving here from overseas who believe that their are only 9 schools one should attend 8 schools covered with vines and one called UC in California. We silently shake our heads at their ignorance as well as yours. |
Keep pushing that Pomona thing little girl. Maybe someday dreams will come true. |
Are you related to the Pomona booster? The incessant pumping for a couple of the 5Cs really has a air of desperation. |
WASP + Bowdoin. Then a drop off. Then you have your 10 schools - CMC, Mudd, Colby, Wellesley, Grinnell, Wesleyan, Carleton, Vassar, Midd, Haverford Trajectories matter even amongst those 10, second tiers though: CMC and Mudd have rising stock, as does Wesleyan (after a downturn) and Carleton; Wellesley and Vassar are holding steady; and Midd, Haverford, Grinnell, and Colby are on a decline (especially Midd). |
Yeah I think it’s “the top northeast SLAC” vs. Pomona, at least in the eyes of the younger generation. All of the northeast SLACs are dusty, so it’s Williams as the northeast default vs. Pomona at this point. |
wtf are you talking about? |
Go to Williams or Amherst so that you can impress people who write things like, "Boom. There it is. Facts." |
| I went to Duke and my spouse went to Dartmouth. We’d go to the SLAC our son attends over our alma maters in a heartbeat. #IYKYK |
100% - DD ended up at another school, but Wesleyan was a huge contender. She's quite artsy and liked the vibe much more than Amherst. |
Genuinely asking - why is this important to you? You have said nothing at all about your child or what major, career, or other opportunities are important to your child. Do those things matter at all to you, or is it all about how other people perceive your child? I feel sorry for your kid. |
Which SLAC? I went to Dartmouth and I would love to know. |
I am confident that 100% of what you wrote is incorrect. |
Interesting. My kid chose Pomona over Dartmouth, but he considered Dartmouth to be more LAC than university. In terms of the education itself, Dartmouth seemed great and felt extremely "liberal artsy"--undergrad focused, small classes, focus on interdisciplinary breadth over focused depth. He really liked both schools, but Pomona was a slightly better fit in terms of culture and he wanted to try out life on the West Coast. Anyhow, in my mind, I still think of Dartmouth as more much like Williams or Colgate than, say, Penn or Columbia. |