Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Interesting schools. Bowdoin College has almost 1,800 undergraduates, while Tufts University has about 6,000 undergraduate students and about 5,000 graduate students.
Bowdoin is a really nice school. Bowdoin College is very much like an elite New England prep boarding school--nice campus, solid academics, motivated students, and involved faculty. Bowdoin is small, comfortable, and intimate. Everyone knows everyone else and, seemingly, each other's business. Excellent prep for law school.
Bowdoin's overlap schools are: Brown, Dartmouth, Middlebury, Williams, Amherst, Wesleyan, Swarthmore, and Colby. Williams, Dartmouth, Middlebury, and Colby are quite similar to Bowdoin in many respects.
In my view, Tufts University is in a different league than is Bowdoin College; this difference is evident in Tuft's overlap schools: Dartmouth, U Chicago, Brown, Harvard, Wesleyan, Georgetown, Northwestern, & WashUStL.
Academics are excellent at both schools.
Different environments. Bowdoin is located in a small town, while Tufts is more urban with easy access to Boston.
OP: If your student wants the experience of an elite New England prep boarding school and the familiarity and intimacy that such an experience entails, then Bowdoin College is the clear choice; but, if your student wants less isolation and more real world exposure at this stage, then Tufts University is the clear choice.
With respect to preparation for law school, both would be outstanding.
I wrote the above post.
OP: I just cannot picture your child at Tufts based on your description of him or her. I have trouble picturing your chils at Dartmouth also as Dartmouth kids tend to be extroverts & socially outgoing personalities.
In addition to Bowdoin, Colby, Bates, Conn College, and Kenyon College should be good fits.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Location alone should make this an easy choice, OP.
NP - hmm I don’t see the “ obvious” you do. Both locations seem pretty terrific to me but for very different reasons.
To answer OPs question though, I’d probably give the edge to Tufts because proximity to Boston will be valuable when they start looking for internships etc. I live not too far from Bowdoin and boy do I love Maine, but it doesn’t have the same density of opportunities as Boston will offer
Anonymous wrote:Interesting schools. Bowdoin College has almost 1,800 undergraduates, while Tufts University has about 6,000 undergraduate students and about 5,000 graduate students.
Bowdoin is a really nice school. Bowdoin College is very much like an elite New England prep boarding school--nice campus, solid academics, motivated students, and involved faculty. Bowdoin is small, comfortable, and intimate. Everyone knows everyone else and, seemingly, each other's business. Excellent prep for law school.
Bowdoin's overlap schools are: Brown, Dartmouth, Middlebury, Williams, Amherst, Wesleyan, Swarthmore, and Colby. Williams, Dartmouth, Middlebury, and Colby are quite similar to Bowdoin in many respects.
In my view, Tufts University is in a different league than is Bowdoin College; this difference is evident in Tuft's overlap schools: Dartmouth, U Chicago, Brown, Harvard, Wesleyan, Georgetown, Northwestern, & WashUStL.
Academics are excellent at both schools.
Different environments. Bowdoin is located in a small town, while Tufts is more urban with easy access to Boston.
OP: If your student wants the experience of an elite New England prep boarding school and the familiarity and intimacy that such an experience entails, then Bowdoin College is the clear choice; but, if your student wants less isolation and more real world exposure at this stage, then Tufts University is the clear choice.
With respect to preparation for law school, both would be outstanding.
Anonymous wrote:Bowdoin or Tufts. For a policial science/history oriented male, likely will go to law school.
Obviously DC hasn’t heard from either yet. But these are his remaining top choices (DC was deferred at first choice (Dartmouth) and in hindsight we think that was good because DC is quiet and the type to have a few close friends and orefer to stay in and watch a movie, not so much the fraternity party type).
Thanks for your thoughts.
Anonymous wrote:Location alone should make this an easy choice, OP.