Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Richmond. My kid is similar and loves it. My next kid is going to w&m in the fall with similar vibe. Kid 1 also liked Davidson a lot and had a hard timing choosing. But loves UR.
Could you be more specific other than just loves UR? What about Richmond that attracts your kid?
Anonymous wrote:I think W&M is a great suggestion! Maybe also somewhere like Skidmore since she’s interested in smaller liberal arts colleges.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP here. Thanks so much.
She's politically liberal but she's not artsy or "alternative" (as we would say back in my day.)
She's a very mainstream and I would say preppy kid by interests and vibe but really wants a diverse college. Just a regular mix of kids from different races, cultures, orientations, walks of life, interests which seems to be a little hard to find outside of state schools.
So this suggests that the LGBTQ concerns of others here are overblown. Nearly all diverse smaller privates are LGBTQ friendly. It comes with the territory, which makes sense because the kids who want a diverse setting care a lot less about this than some parents.
Brown is 40% LGBTQ. Not overblown.
For the millionth time on here, that poll was conducted outside of one dining hall and was voluntary participation. Some answered questions in jest. Brown is definitely LGBTQ friendly, but it is not 40%. It’s not that different than any other elite school in make-up, the top schools are extremely similar in student body.
DP. What puts me off about some of these schools with extremely high LGBTQ self reporting is that most of those are females who identify as “nonbinary” and it’s basically a bogus thing most of them will grow out of at some point, especially once the enter the real world and experience real sexism and misogyny because they are female, regardless of how they identify.
It’s hard for me to take someone seriously when they believe in something so fake.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:How much is Davidson paying you moms to boost them everywhere? I seriously don't understand what's so special about it.
It’s not considered a very academic place. Fit for some demographics.
Is there a school more academic than Davidson in North Carolina?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:How much is Davidson paying you moms to boost them everywhere? I seriously don't understand what's so special about it.
It’s not considered a very academic place. Fit for some demographics.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP here. Thanks so much.
She's politically liberal but she's not artsy or "alternative" (as we would say back in my day.)
She's a very mainstream and I would say preppy kid by interests and vibe but really wants a diverse college. Just a regular mix of kids from different races, cultures, orientations, walks of life, interests which seems to be a little hard to find outside of state schools.
So this suggests that the LGBTQ concerns of others here are overblown. Nearly all diverse smaller privates are LGBTQ friendly. It comes with the territory, which makes sense because the kids who want a diverse setting care a lot less about this than some parents.
Brown is 40% LGBTQ. Not overblown.
For the millionth time on here, that poll was conducted outside of one dining hall and was voluntary participation. Some answered questions in jest. Brown is definitely LGBTQ friendly, but it is not 40%. It’s not that different than any other elite school in make-up, the top schools are extremely similar in student body.
Anonymous wrote:Richmond. My kid is similar and loves it. My next kid is going to w&m in the fall with similar vibe. Kid 1 also liked Davidson a lot and had a hard timing choosing. But loves UR.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP here. Thanks so much.
She's politically liberal but she's not artsy or "alternative" (as we would say back in my day.)
She's a very mainstream and I would say preppy kid by interests and vibe but really wants a diverse college. Just a regular mix of kids from different races, cultures, orientations, walks of life, interests which seems to be a little hard to find outside of state schools.
So this suggests that the LGBTQ concerns of others here are overblown. Nearly all diverse smaller privates are LGBTQ friendly. It comes with the territory, which makes sense because the kids who want a diverse setting care a lot less about this than some parents.
Brown is 40% LGBTQ. Not overblown.
For the millionth time on here, that poll was conducted outside of one dining hall and was voluntary participation. Some answered questions in jest. Brown is definitely LGBTQ friendly, but it is not 40%. It’s not that different than any other elite school in make-up, the top schools are extremely similar in student body.
You can’t want a diverse school if you are freaked out by LGBTQ students and how they might act on campus.