Anonymous wrote:This so depends on the student.
I knew 2 kids looking at colleges. One said "I want to see someone I know everywhere I go" and chose a 2500 student school and is happy. The other said "I want to meet someone new every day and is going to a 20,000 student school and is also happy.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What's a good enrollment size for an ideal (social, academic, intellectual, opportunities, career) college experience?
A. > 2,000
B. 2,000 -5,000
C. 5,000-10,000
D. >10,000
E. >25,000
Depends upon the kid, but IMO the 4-8K undergrad is the best size. Large enough that it doesn't seem like HS and you won't know everyone, yet small enough that you will get to know many people and more importantly the class sizes will be smaller---not likely to see 250+ in any courses, most will likely be 25-50 students.
However, a go getter can do well at a large university, but you have to work harder to find research, get help from profs/etc when there are 20K+ students.
Ultimately it depends upon what the student wants, because a student will succeed best in a place that's the right fit for them! Happy student means success more times than not
even at larger universities, certain majors offer a smaller environment/built in family. My daughter is considering ODU, which is huge, but a smaller major/department. She spent a week there about a month ago and met the professors in that department and had a really great time.
Just something else to consider as you are thinking about these things.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What's a good enrollment size for an ideal (social, academic, intellectual, opportunities, career) college experience?
A. > 2,000
B. 2,000 -5,000
C. 5,000-10,000
D. >10,000
E. >25,000
Depends upon the kid, but IMO the 4-8K undergrad is the best size. Large enough that it doesn't seem like HS and you won't know everyone, yet small enough that you will get to know many people and more importantly the class sizes will be smaller---not likely to see 250+ in any courses, most will likely be 25-50 students.
However, a go getter can do well at a large university, but you have to work harder to find research, get help from profs/etc when there are 20K+ students.
Ultimately it depends upon what the student wants, because a student will succeed best in a place that's the right fit for them! Happy student means success more times than not
Anonymous wrote:What's a good enrollment size for an ideal (social, academic, intellectual, opportunities, career) college experience?
A. > 2,000
B. 2,000 -5,000
C. 5,000-10,000
D. >10,000
E. >25,000