Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Other than the Fiske guide which I ordered, are there any college guides you can recommend? College Confidential seems unreal to me, who are all these kids with 12 APs? I want to find a liberal, not too hippy school where science is a focus, not an afterthought.
PP here.
CC is less unreal, and more really scary. There are a lot of those crazy kinds of kids in suburbs/urban centers across america and even more around the world. Competition is out of control.
I, too, wonder who these kids are with 12 APs, 2000 hours of community service, a part-time job, cured baldness, etc. I know some pretty sharp kids, and none of them come close to taking 12 AP courses.Anonymous wrote:Other than the Fiske guide which I ordered, are there any college guides you can recommend? College Confidential seems unreal to me, who are all these kids with 12 APs? I want to find a liberal, not too hippy school where science is a focus, not an afterthought.
Anonymous wrote:Other than the Fiske guide which I ordered, are there any college guides you can recommend? College Confidential seems unreal to me, who are all these kids with 12 APs? I want to find a liberal, not too hippy school where science is a focus, not an afterthought.
Anonymous wrote:Not engineering, not physics. Maybe microbiology? Or some field leading to epidemiology or public health? DC not very certain in that regard
Anonymous wrote:You might look at Case Western. Nice campus, science focus, mid-size and good merit aid. Carnegie Mellon is much more competitive these days and you must apply to a specific program/college. Many of the SLAC have strong science departments. Take a look at Colleges that Change Lives (there's a book and website http://www.ctcl.org/). They make a good case for the fact that most SLACs can provide a strong science education (except for engineering, which in most cases means you need to look at a larger school). Harvey Mudd is very selective.
Anonymous wrote:harvey mudd college
sat 2020 though