Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:DS is applying overseas for this reason. University of Amsterdam is a target
Same. Got into McGill and will be glad to get out of this wash dc leftist fishbowl.
By moving to Canada? OK ...
Wait till the other poster gets to Amsterdam
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Liberty. By political you mean “liberal” right? You’re fine if the politics are to the right so a school like Liberty should be fine.
NP, not OP, but this is my question too. And yes, I'll say it - I am not interested in sending DC to a progressive/ liberal school. Liberty is not what we're looking for.
Any other thoughts?
I think you underestimate how much the current wokeness has seized higher ed. When I went to professional school, it was just that. For learning my profession. My school has been annexed by Wokeistan. And don’t get me wrong, I’m totally #BLM, but it’s definitely a different place than before.
Maybe engineering programs are still focused on core curriculum but no way any SLAC or Ivy in America is.
I think you are oversestimating it because Fox and OANN have pushed it as an agenda item.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:DS is applying overseas for this reason. University of Amsterdam is a target
Same. Got into McGill and will be glad to get out of this wash dc leftist fishbowl.
By moving to Canada? OK ...
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:DS is applying overseas for this reason. University of Amsterdam is a target
Same. Got into McGill and will be glad to get out of this wash dc leftist fishbowl.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Choice of area of concentration may be more important than choice of college. Unfortunately, academics (more often in the humanities) have forgotten the meaning of the term "liberal arts." A liberal arts education is supposed to develop critical thinking skills to choose the best path in life, not to indoctrinate.
You think it’s “the academics” who have forgotten that? I suppose even if that is true, at least they knew what it means at one time.
Funniest post in the thread.
Who lacks critical thinking skills? Yesterday the Trump administration released the "1776 Report," allegedly history but without any footnotes or citations. So, a piece of propaganda reviled by all reputable historians, the ones who actually have critical thinking skills (and work at the schools OP wants to avoid).
https://www.washingtonpost.com/history/2021/01/19/1776-report-historians-trump/
Not seeing how that is relevant to op’s question. Not everyone trying to avoid overly political campuses is a trumper. There are plenty of centrists and even mildly conservative sorts who don’t feel comfortable in the current academic climate at most schools.
This is absolutely true. Conservatives (“Trumper” or not), know exactly which schools they’re interested in. If you want a conservative school, it isn’t hard to find. It is hard to find a school where there is actually open discourse that isn’t dominated by one side or another.
I'm not even looking for that much. I'd just like to find a school where a kid can keep their head down and learn chemistry without being berated about pronouns or other such.
Your kid can do that at any school in the country. My very conservative kid is doing fine at a very liberal university. This is not an insurmountable problem no matter how much you’d like to make it so.
Exactly.
Even assuming there are sit-ins and “nasty letters” directed at the endowment offices those wouldn’t affect your kid’s ability to learn chemistry, or anything else. Really wonder if this is just all an attempt at trolling.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Choice of area of concentration may be more important than choice of college. Unfortunately, academics (more often in the humanities) have forgotten the meaning of the term "liberal arts." A liberal arts education is supposed to develop critical thinking skills to choose the best path in life, not to indoctrinate.
You think it’s “the academics” who have forgotten that? I suppose even if that is true, at least they knew what it means at one time.
Funniest post in the thread.
Who lacks critical thinking skills? Yesterday the Trump administration released the "1776 Report," allegedly history but without any footnotes or citations. So, a piece of propaganda reviled by all reputable historians, the ones who actually have critical thinking skills (and work at the schools OP wants to avoid).
https://www.washingtonpost.com/history/2021/01/19/1776-report-historians-trump/
Not seeing how that is relevant to op’s question. Not everyone trying to avoid overly political campuses is a trumper. There are plenty of centrists and even mildly conservative sorts who don’t feel comfortable in the current academic climate at most schools.
This is absolutely true. Conservatives (“Trumper” or not), know exactly which schools they’re interested in. If you want a conservative school, it isn’t hard to find. It is hard to find a school where there is actually open discourse that isn’t dominated by one side or another.
I'm not even looking for that much. I'd just like to find a school where a kid can keep their head down and learn chemistry without being berated about pronouns or other such.
Your kid can do that at any school in the country. My very conservative kid is doing fine at a very liberal university. This is not an insurmountable problem no matter how much you’d like to make it so.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Choice of area of concentration may be more important than choice of college. Unfortunately, academics (more often in the humanities) have forgotten the meaning of the term "liberal arts." A liberal arts education is supposed to develop critical thinking skills to choose the best path in life, not to indoctrinate.
You think it’s “the academics” who have forgotten that? I suppose even if that is true, at least they knew what it means at one time.
Funniest post in the thread.
Who lacks critical thinking skills? Yesterday the Trump administration released the "1776 Report," allegedly history but without any footnotes or citations. So, a piece of propaganda reviled by all reputable historians, the ones who actually have critical thinking skills (and work at the schools OP wants to avoid).
https://www.washingtonpost.com/history/2021/01/19/1776-report-historians-trump/
Not seeing how that is relevant to op’s question. Not everyone trying to avoid overly political campuses is a trumper. There are plenty of centrists and even mildly conservative sorts who don’t feel comfortable in the current academic climate at most schools.
This is absolutely true. Conservatives (“Trumper” or not), know exactly which schools they’re interested in. If you want a conservative school, it isn’t hard to find. It is hard to find a school where there is actually open discourse that isn’t dominated by one side or another.
I'm not even looking for that much. I'd just like to find a school where a kid can keep their head down and learn chemistry without being berated about pronouns or other such.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Choice of area of concentration may be more important than choice of college. Unfortunately, academics (more often in the humanities) have forgotten the meaning of the term "liberal arts." A liberal arts education is supposed to develop critical thinking skills to choose the best path in life, not to indoctrinate.
You think it’s “the academics” who have forgotten that? I suppose even if that is true, at least they knew what it means at one time.
Funniest post in the thread.
Who lacks critical thinking skills? Yesterday the Trump administration released the "1776 Report," allegedly history but without any footnotes or citations. So, a piece of propaganda reviled by all reputable historians, the ones who actually have critical thinking skills (and work at the schools OP wants to avoid).
https://www.washingtonpost.com/history/2021/01/19/1776-report-historians-trump/
Not seeing how that is relevant to op’s question. Not everyone trying to avoid overly political campuses is a trumper. There are plenty of centrists and even mildly conservative sorts who don’t feel comfortable in the current academic climate at most schools.
This is absolutely true. Conservatives (“Trumper” or not), know exactly which schools they’re interested in. If you want a conservative school, it isn’t hard to find. It is hard to find a school where there is actually open discourse that isn’t dominated by one side or another.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Choice of area of concentration may be more important than choice of college. Unfortunately, academics (more often in the humanities) have forgotten the meaning of the term "liberal arts." A liberal arts education is supposed to develop critical thinking skills to choose the best path in life, not to indoctrinate.
You think it’s “the academics” who have forgotten that? I suppose even if that is true, at least they knew what it means at one time.
Funniest post in the thread.
Who lacks critical thinking skills? Yesterday the Trump administration released the "1776 Report," allegedly history but without any footnotes or citations. So, a piece of propaganda reviled by all reputable historians, the ones who actually have critical thinking skills (and work at the schools OP wants to avoid).
https://www.washingtonpost.com/history/2021/01/19/1776-report-historians-trump/
Not seeing how that is relevant to op’s question. Not everyone trying to avoid overly political campuses is a trumper. There are plenty of centrists and even mildly conservative sorts who don’t feel comfortable in the current academic climate at most schools.
Anonymous wrote:There are literally 4,000 colleges and 2 that had student strikes.
Anonymous wrote:Most Big 10 universities are very diverse politically
Chicago, Vandy, Rice, Rochester, Case Western, Emory, Carnegie Mellon
Davidson, Franklin & Marshall, Denison, Wooster, Lawrence, St. Olaf, Centre, Rhodes, Claremont MCkenna, Oxy
Anonymous wrote:DS is applying overseas for this reason. University of Amsterdam is a target
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:To 17:47: no one is arguing that students be unaware of politics, or politically apathetic. We are simply asking for recommendations of schools in which a certain political leaning is not shoved into faces at all moments of the day - and woe to anyone who disagrees or refuses to kowtow and go along with asinine antics, such as striking and canceling classes.
That’s it. And it really isn’t too much to ask.
Honestly this is not the difficult problem you seem to think it is.
Honestly, it actually IS a difficult, nay, insurmountable problem at "top SLACs," which is the question OP asked. Look up ^^^^ there. SLACs. and Ivies. The fact that everyone can find a home at 60,000 enrollment U. of Texas Austin is irrelevant if OP's kid only wants a tiny SLAC.
To OP, Penn business and pre-med programs would be possibilities.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:To 17:47: no one is arguing that students be unaware of politics, or politically apathetic. We are simply asking for recommendations of schools in which a certain political leaning is not shoved into faces at all moments of the day - and woe to anyone who disagrees or refuses to kowtow and go along with asinine antics, such as striking and canceling classes.
That’s it. And it really isn’t too much to ask.
Honestly this is not the difficult problem you seem to think it is.
Honestly, it actually IS a difficult, nay, insurmountable problem at "top SLACs," which is the question OP asked. Look up ^^^^ there. SLACs. and Ivies. The fact that everyone can find a home at 60,000 enrollment U. of Texas Austin is irrelevant if OP's kid only wants a tiny SLAC.
To OP, Penn business and pre-med programs would be possibilities.