Anonymous wrote:Sorry about resurrecting an old thread, but I have a question. A colleague recently suggested this school for my daughter who loves the outdoors & plans on majoring in environmental science. However, my daughter is LGBT. Is it worth suggesting to her or would she not be comfortable with her identity? She's actually pretty centrist politically, as we visited Oberlin & Kenyon, and she found Oberlin too out there, but liked Kenyon.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Gorgeous campus - "The Domain." Great creative writing program. Not a lot of diversity.
What about economic diversity?
Anonymous wrote:There have been at least 10 interns in my office who hail from Sewanee. The thought amongst the partners of my firm is that these are all "good girls."
They seem to want to get married and have children ASAP. Not that there is anything wrong with that - they just do not seem committed to a career.
I think it is a place for people who are not that bright but need a degree. Just saying.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I am from the South and am looking at LACs for my DS where he would qualify for some merit aid. I grew up with kids who went to Sewanee and Davidson and Elon (and Davidson is head and shoulder above the other two, and I am not an alum of any of these schools). We scratched Sewanee off the list early. And not for academic reasons. I agree with PPs that it is on the rise. It has a much better reputation now than it did a decade ago, and I think the degrees will only appreciate in value.
FOR MY KID Sewanee would be a bad fit. Too homogenous. Too conservative. Too Greek traditional Southern can be charming. But I can tell you first hand it can also be oppressive and isolating if you don’t fit the mold. For reference, my kid is looking at Oberlin, Kenyon, Grinnell and Wooster. He would not fit the Sewanee mold. Davidson is still on the list, but we have many of the same concerns.
I would not worry about Sewanee academics. And I don’t GAF about whether the school impresses my neighbors. I would look at the fit for your particular kid carefully.
If you are looking at Oberlin, Kenyon, and Wooster - curious as to your thoughts on Denison ?
Anonymous wrote:I am from the South and am looking at LACs for my DS where he would qualify for some merit aid. I grew up with kids who went to Sewanee and Davidson and Elon (and Davidson is head and shoulder above the other two, and I am not an alum of any of these schools). We scratched Sewanee off the list early. And not for academic reasons. I agree with PPs that it is on the rise. It has a much better reputation now than it did a decade ago, and I think the degrees will only appreciate in value.
FOR MY KID Sewanee would be a bad fit. Too homogenous. Too conservative. Too Greek traditional Southern can be charming. But I can tell you first hand it can also be oppressive and isolating if you don’t fit the mold. For reference, my kid is looking at Oberlin, Kenyon, Grinnell and Wooster. He would not fit the Sewanee mold. Davidson is still on the list, but we have many of the same concerns.
I would not worry about Sewanee academics. And I don’t GAF about whether the school impresses my neighbors. I would look at the fit for your particular kid carefully.
Anonymous wrote:I don't know who to be more repulsed by, the liberals bashing Sewanee -sight unseen - because it is Southern school or the Conservatives whining about gluten free options in the dining hall.
You all need to get out more.
Anonymous wrote:It does have a heavy Greek system. Depends if you are into that or not. Also, the girls do dress up more.
Anonymous wrote:Gorgeous campus - "The Domain." Great creative writing program. Not a lot of diversity.