Anonymous wrote:Just because a school rises in popularity does not mean that it has become a "better" school. Bowdoin has been a good school for a long time and has attracted smart and engaged students. But what has changed is that it has become more popular and is getting more applications and thus is more selective. And, of course, DCUM assumes selectivity makes it a better school. As the Ivies and Williams/Amherst/Swarthmore have become more difficult to get into, more kids have started looking at the other strong SLACs. A family member had a great experience at Bowdoin as a recruited athlete (and fully acknowledges that he would have not gotten in without the athlete hook). We visited at all three Maine SLACs more than once and felt that they are all far more alike than different. DCUM really needs to get over this ranking business.
Anonymous wrote:Our neighbor is displaying a big flag for their child’s successful admission. So happy for them. Excellent school!
Anonymous wrote:This discussion about rankings and who’s a notch above whom is absolutely insane. Anyone making these statements can have absolutely no basis for what s/he is saying and should be completely ignored.
+1Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The top of the NESCAC has long been Williams, Amherst, Bowdoin, and Middlebury, in that order. It’s been that way for several decades. It’s not quite at the same level as the first two but right below them with Middlebury. Hamilton, Colgate, Colby, Swarthmore, Haverford and a few other NE SLACs are up in the same general tier.
Says who? I’d put Swarthmore and Pomona above Bowdoin and Middlebury (as does USNWR, by the way), and Carleton and Haverford on par with it. This is so subjective … Colgate and Hamilton are a notch down Imo, they have only rocketed to popularity/selectivity in the sense they’d be mentioned in a convo with the others in the past 15 years (before you know it Colby is going to be lumped in with them, when not too long ago they were on even par with Bates).
Anonymous wrote:The top of the NESCAC has long been Williams, Amherst, Bowdoin, and Middlebury, in that order. It’s been that way for several decades. It’s not quite at the same level as the first two but right below them with Middlebury. Hamilton, Colgate, Colby, Swarthmore, Haverford and a few other NE SLACs are up in the same general tier.
Anonymous wrote:The top of the NESCAC has long been Williams, Amherst, Bowdoin, and Middlebury, in that order. It’s been that way for several decades. It’s not quite at the same level as the first two but right below them with Middlebury. Hamilton, Colgate, Colby, Swarthmore, Haverford and a few other NE SLACs are up in the same general tier.
Anonymous wrote:The top of the NESCAC has long been Williams, Amherst, Bowdoin, and Middlebury, in that order. It’s been that way for several decades. It’s not quite at the same level as the first two but right below them with Middlebury. Hamilton, Colgate, Colby, Swarthmore, Haverford and a few other NE SLACs are up in the same general tier.
Anonymous wrote:The top of the NESCAC has long been Williams, Amherst, Bowdoin, and Middlebury, in that order. It’s been that way for several decades. It’s not quite at the same level as the first two but right below them with Middlebury. Hamilton, Colgate, Colby, Swarthmore, Haverford and a few other NE SLACs are up in the same general tier.