Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We visited extensively. On the whole the consortium opens up the social and club possibilities for these small schools. The extent very much depends on the student making an effort. I got the impression that the ties are strongest between the pairs of schools that join up for sports but for an extroverted kid, no real barriers to making friends campus wide. My kid did not end up applying because his academic interest is in a multiple disciplinary major that would have had to be supported by multiple schools. The information we received from students was that cross registration could be very difficult for the upper level courses due to prioritization for "home" school or not offered. It just sounded as if it could get really complex for meeting graduation requirements. Beautiful campus with plenty to do in LA. His friends that now attend are very happy. They happen to be humanities majors and pretty much have their classes within the college they were admitted to. If my kid didn't really need a university setting, he would have gone there in a heartbeat.
It is pretty far from LA.
About an hour with traffic. I can reach Pasadena in about 35 minutes.
Like college kids are going to be doing all of this driving on a regular basis. And, I would think that Claremont itself would get a little boring after a while.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We visited extensively. On the whole the consortium opens up the social and club possibilities for these small schools. The extent very much depends on the student making an effort. I got the impression that the ties are strongest between the pairs of schools that join up for sports but for an extroverted kid, no real barriers to making friends campus wide. My kid did not end up applying because his academic interest is in a multiple disciplinary major that would have had to be supported by multiple schools. The information we received from students was that cross registration could be very difficult for the upper level courses due to prioritization for "home" school or not offered. It just sounded as if it could get really complex for meeting graduation requirements. Beautiful campus with plenty to do in LA. His friends that now attend are very happy. They happen to be humanities majors and pretty much have their classes within the college they were admitted to. If my kid didn't really need a university setting, he would have gone there in a heartbeat.
It is pretty far from LA.
About an hour with traffic. I can reach Pasadena in about 35 minutes.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We visited extensively. On the whole the consortium opens up the social and club possibilities for these small schools. The extent very much depends on the student making an effort. I got the impression that the ties are strongest between the pairs of schools that join up for sports but for an extroverted kid, no real barriers to making friends campus wide. My kid did not end up applying because his academic interest is in a multiple disciplinary major that would have had to be supported by multiple schools. The information we received from students was that cross registration could be very difficult for the upper level courses due to prioritization for "home" school or not offered. It just sounded as if it could get really complex for meeting graduation requirements. Beautiful campus with plenty to do in LA. His friends that now attend are very happy. They happen to be humanities majors and pretty much have their classes within the college they were admitted to. If my kid didn't really need a university setting, he would have gone there in a heartbeat.
It is pretty far from LA.
Anonymous wrote:We visited extensively. On the whole the consortium opens up the social and club possibilities for these small schools. The extent very much depends on the student making an effort. I got the impression that the ties are strongest between the pairs of schools that join up for sports but for an extroverted kid, no real barriers to making friends campus wide. My kid did not end up applying because his academic interest is in a multiple disciplinary major that would have had to be supported by multiple schools. The information we received from students was that cross registration could be very difficult for the upper level courses due to prioritization for "home" school or not offered. It just sounded as if it could get really complex for meeting graduation requirements. Beautiful campus with plenty to do in LA. His friends that now attend are very happy. They happen to be humanities majors and pretty much have their classes within the college they were admitted to. If my kid didn't really need a university setting, he would have gone there in a heartbeat.
Anonymous wrote:Has anyone visited the 5 Claremont Colleges of California? What are your impressions of the schools? Does the consortium add much to the experience, or do students primarily remain in their home campus? Any other information or perspective you have would also be appreciated. Thanks for your insights.