Anonymous wrote:Many students don’t apply because they find these schools too small and isolated
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Daughter is at Bates and loves it. It has a strong academic reputation, and the thesis and class requirements exceed some of the Ivies and little Ivies, so you know the students are getting a solid education. The area is fantastic - close to Freeport, Portland, Range lake (a favorite in May!), and many hiking spots. The campus bus to Boston Logan makes it easy to fly direct to many cities. The vibe is definitely welcoming and there is always something fun happening on campus. Acceptance rate this year (2023) was 12 percent, which makes it very selective (top 30 in country). All the NESCACs are truly great choices!
This. We're pushing our kid toward a NESCAC school for sports, small school, great alumni network, etc. He has been lightly recruited for D1, but our experience is that D1 feels too much like a job. Kid will most likely go to grad school so no need to go to a hypercompetitive environment for undergrad. Williams and Middlebury are top choices.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The bottom line is that very few people outside of Northeastern and Mid-Atlantic upper middle class areas have heard of these schools. There are so many other options that people are interested in—higher ranked slacs and, of course, big state universities. It’s great that attendance at one of these places seems to have helped get some folks here where they wanted to be in life—wealthy or whatever. But it is what it is in terms of name recognition and prestige. Not much of either.
I’ve never even thought of applying to a school like Colby, and my son didn’t apply to any school like that, but I think it’s a mistake to evaluate a SLAC education solely in terms of financial ROI based on the full list price.
One obvious reason to go to a place like Colby is that the quality of a bachelor’s degree from there is obviously on par with the quality of a bachelor’s degree from the University of Virginia. for most families, the net cash cost of attendance for those schools will probably be similar to, or lower than, the full out-of-state cost of attendance for a state flagship. That means that, for students in states with a weak state flagship, the quality-adjusted ROI for a Colby class college might be a pretty good.
A second reason is that, for a student who’d love a Colby-class college and feel lost at a University of Alabama-class school, maybe going to a Colby type college would increase the likelihood of the student ending up with a bachelor’s degree by, say, 10 percent. If the value of a bachelor’s degree is about an average of $25,000 per year over 40 years, or $1 million over the course of a career, the 10 percent increase in the likelihood of a kid actually graduating could easily be worth $100,000, or paying $25,000 in extra tuition money per year.
Thank you for your thoughtful and reasonable post. Unfortunately, you are clearly too sane, rational and fair-minded to continue to be allowed to post on this thread. Farewell and godspeed to you.
Anonymous wrote:Daughter is at Bates and loves it. It has a strong academic reputation, and the thesis and class requirements exceed some of the Ivies and little Ivies, so you know the students are getting a solid education. The area is fantastic - close to Freeport, Portland, Range lake (a favorite in May!), and many hiking spots. The campus bus to Boston Logan makes it easy to fly direct to many cities. The vibe is definitely welcoming and there is always something fun happening on campus. Acceptance rate this year (2023) was 12 percent, which makes it very selective (top 30 in country). All the NESCACs are truly great choices!
Anonymous wrote:They are all good schools but my kids private school counselor definitely pushed him to pick Colby. Her reason was it will be an easy transition as it will feel just like an extension of private prep school. This is not what he wanted to hear and he ended up choosing a state school instead
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:They are all good schools but my kids private school counselor definitely pushed him to pick Colby. Her reason was it will be an easy transition as it will feel just like an extension of private prep school. This is not what he wanted to hear and he ended up choosing a state school instead
Really? Private school counselor pushed kids to pick up a particular school? I am not sure if I trust you. The counselor may have recommended Colby, but why he/she pushed your kid to pick it? Do you know why?
Our private school also pushes SLACs over large state schools. No one ever wants to go to UMD College Park although UVA is a bit more popular.
Kids would rather go to UMiami than UMD
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:They are all good schools but my kids private school counselor definitely pushed him to pick Colby. Her reason was it will be an easy transition as it will feel just like an extension of private prep school. This is not what he wanted to hear and he ended up choosing a state school instead
Really? Private school counselor pushed kids to pick up a particular school? I am not sure if I trust you. The counselor may have recommended Colby, but why he/she pushed your kid to pick it? Do you know why?
Anonymous wrote:They are all good schools but my kids private school counselor definitely pushed him to pick Colby. Her reason was it will be an easy transition as it will feel just like an extension of private prep school. This is not what he wanted to hear and he ended up choosing a state school instead
Anonymous wrote:They are all good schools but my kids private school counselor definitely pushed him to pick Colby. Her reason was it will be an easy transition as it will feel just like an extension of private prep school. This is not what he wanted to hear and he ended up choosing a state school instead
Anonymous wrote:The bottom line is that very few people outside of Northeastern and Mid-Atlantic upper middle class areas have heard of these schools. There are so many other options that people are interested in—higher ranked slacs and, of course, big state universities. It’s great that attendance at one of these places seems to have helped get some folks here where they wanted to be in life—wealthy or whatever. But it is what it is in terms of name recognition and prestige. Not much of either.