Anonymous wrote:Check out Reed .... great for a passionate learner.
Anonymous wrote:The daughter of a good friend of mine from the Boston area is now at Vanderbilt and loves it. She's also liberal, a little crunchy, went to a good prep school but didn't have the grades for a top tier school. She loves literature and writing and was opposed to a school that was "too southern" or too Greek. Vanderbilt has been a great fit. She's a sophomore now.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This is a really great list. Second the poster who mentioned Smith College - Northampton is a lovely college town. If you are looking at the 5 college area add Mount Holyoke to your list too. Students can take classes at any of the other colleges (Amherst, Smith, Hampshire, MHC and UMass)
Appreciate 21:42s take on larger univ. vs smaller liberal arts - gives me some ammo with my hubby who leans more toward larger universities.
I went to Mt. Holyoke and the school really changed my life. It is a FANTASTIC education and not quite as hard to get into as Smith and some of the other seven sisters. Great programs in theater and art...
Anonymous wrote:This is a really great list. Second the poster who mentioned Smith College - Northampton is a lovely college town. If you are looking at the 5 college area add Mount Holyoke to your list too. Students can take classes at any of the other colleges (Amherst, Smith, Hampshire, MHC and UMass)
Appreciate 21:42s take on larger univ. vs smaller liberal arts - gives me some ammo with my hubby who leans more toward larger universities.
Anonymous wrote:I was also interested in small liberal arts colleges in the 2,000 - 3,000 student range. Gettysburg College in PA ended up being a great fit for me, but I agree with the advice a few PPs have already given - the best school will be the one where your daughter feels at home on campus.
Not sure if you've already been doing this, but if any of the schools you're visiting have campus host programs, that can be a great way as a prospective student to get an idea of what going to a particular school might be like. Current students host prospective students overnight, then take them to a few classes, for lunch or dinner in the cafeteria, etc. I did this when I was looking at colleges and found it to be really helpful. Good luck!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Re feeling at home. I'm 8:05 (and another ex-prof!). And I wouldn't start there. I'd start with programs and then only visit schools that have what she's looking for academically. Among those schools, fit's certainly a voting issue -- and could certainly be THE voting issue if she gets some place and has the "I'd hate it here" reaction.
Conversely, I think it sends the wrong message about what college is to start from which campus environments do I like best and treat academics as an afterthought.
So, yes, fit matters, but it's not all social/environmental. It's curricular and pedagogical as well. And if you start with the former, it'll be hard to put the latter in the picture.
I must have mistakenly left the impression that this is how she is approaching her college search. She is not. She is only interested in visiting schools that offer a classics/classical studies major and preferably schools where she can double major in classics and in theatre.![]()