Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Could depend on which APs and scores if the student sat for the tests, but I would think you could look at Conn College and College of Wooster. These schools are relatively selective but applicants need not be the type of kid often discussed on this board we’re all supposed to believe is average (1500+, 10+ APs, Chancellor of the Exchequer, etc.). Full pay, even at schools with large endowments is a positive if not outcome determinative factor. And these schools don’t have large endowments. Even schools that hold themselves out as need blind often pivot to need aware at some point in the process, be that evaluating spring admits or taking kids off the waitlist.
We looked at these (wasn’t TO, applied with scores in low 1400s but grades/rigor seemed similar). I liked both. DC thought Conn had a bit too east coast/prep school kid vibe so didn’t apply. The offer from Wooster was great, and we were pleasantly surprised by the campus and opportunities. As many have said, their supports were great.
Other options: Skidmore (might be a reach), Union, Denison, St Olaf, Muhlenberg, Hobart, St Lawrence, maybe Kenyon as a reach, Beloit might make a nice safety. If you’re open to west coast maybe Lewis and Clark, Occidental, Puget Sound.
Avoid. Oxy and Pomona were both sued by DOJ, US Dept of Ed and the Brandeis Center in March for failure to protect the civil rights of its Jewish students. Read the FB page "Occidental Parents Against Anti-Semitism". Ten Jewish students have left or transferred due to fear. Oxy settled the case with stiff sanctions last week. Pomona still has not so the ACLU announced in November it is going after it. https://www.adl.org/resources/press-release/adl-and-brandeis-center-settle-title-vi-complaint-after-occidental-college.
When are you going to shut up about this? Their discipline wasn’t even “stiff,” it was to accept some pro-Israel definition in their student code. This is beyond a non-issue.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Colby literally begs on its knees for these students.
Funny - when we visited - couldn’t even get a seat at the info session. Didn’t feel like we were being begged! Beautiful campus
Okay? You could’ve gone the next day and had a private tour. That’s just up to chance. No one said they get no applicants.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Colby literally begs on its knees for these students.
Funny - when we visited - couldn’t even get a seat at the info session. Didn’t feel like we were being begged! Beautiful campus
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Could depend on which APs and scores if the student sat for the tests, but I would think you could look at Conn College and College of Wooster. These schools are relatively selective but applicants need not be the type of kid often discussed on this board we’re all supposed to believe is average (1500+, 10+ APs, Chancellor of the Exchequer, etc.). Full pay, even at schools with large endowments is a positive if not outcome determinative factor. And these schools don’t have large endowments. Even schools that hold themselves out as need blind often pivot to need aware at some point in the process, be that evaluating spring admits or taking kids off the waitlist.
We looked at these (wasn’t TO, applied with scores in low 1400s but grades/rigor seemed similar). I liked both. DC thought Conn had a bit too east coast/prep school kid vibe so didn’t apply. The offer from Wooster was great, and we were pleasantly surprised by the campus and opportunities. As many have said, their supports were great.
Other options: Skidmore (might be a reach), Union, Denison, St Olaf, Muhlenberg, Hobart, St Lawrence, maybe Kenyon as a reach, Beloit might make a nice safety. If you’re open to west coast maybe Lewis and Clark, Occidental, Puget Sound.
Avoid. Oxy and Pomona were both sued by DOJ, US Dept of Ed and the Brandeis Center in March for failure to protect the civil rights of its Jewish students. Read the FB page "Occidental Parents Against Anti-Semitism". Ten Jewish students have left or transferred due to fear. Oxy settled the case with stiff sanctions last week. Pomona still has not so the ACLU announced in November it is going after it. https://www.adl.org/resources/press-release/adl-and-brandeis-center-settle-title-vi-complaint-after-occidental-college.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Could depend on which APs and scores if the student sat for the tests, but I would think you could look at Conn College and College of Wooster. These schools are relatively selective but applicants need not be the type of kid often discussed on this board we’re all supposed to believe is average (1500+, 10+ APs, Chancellor of the Exchequer, etc.). Full pay, even at schools with large endowments is a positive if not outcome determinative factor. And these schools don’t have large endowments. Even schools that hold themselves out as need blind often pivot to need aware at some point in the process, be that evaluating spring admits or taking kids off the waitlist.
We looked at these (wasn’t TO, applied with scores in low 1400s but grades/rigor seemed similar). I liked both. DC thought Conn had a bit too east coast/prep school kid vibe so didn’t apply. The offer from Wooster was great, and we were pleasantly surprised by the campus and opportunities. As many have said, their supports were great.
Other options: Skidmore (might be a reach), Union, Denison, St Olaf, Muhlenberg, Hobart, St Lawrence, maybe Kenyon as a reach, Beloit might make a nice safety. If you’re open to west coast maybe Lewis and Clark, Occidental, Puget Sound.
Anonymous wrote:Colby literally begs on its knees for these students.
Anonymous wrote:Could depend on which APs and scores if the student sat for the tests, but I would think you could look at Conn College and College of Wooster. These schools are relatively selective but applicants need not be the type of kid often discussed on this board we’re all supposed to believe is average (1500+, 10+ APs, Chancellor of the Exchequer, etc.). Full pay, even at schools with large endowments is a positive if not outcome determinative factor. And these schools don’t have large endowments. Even schools that hold themselves out as need blind often pivot to need aware at some point in the process, be that evaluating spring admits or taking kids off the waitlist.