Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Other LACs: Pomona College (1,690 students) and Claremont McKenna College (1,350) students are attractive due to location, majors offered, and part of a consortium.
I went to Pomona and at least when I went there, the location wasn't that great. Incredibly smoggy all the time, like you're always sucking on an exhaust pipe. The town of Claremont isn't very interesting, nowhere good to walk to. Very far from the beach, 45 minutes drive to LA, out of the question unless you have a car. Same applies to the other colleges in the consortium.
This is very helpful information.
About 8 or 9 years ago, I raised the issue of air pollution/smog with a former professor in the Claremont consortium. She dismissed any cncerns about smog so I thought that it might just be a problem during the summer months.
Thank you for the info.
pretty outdated info- air quality is fine in claremont these days (we have a child with asthma attending), it's a beautiful leafy east-coast like college town that's completely walkable and constantly makes the list for best college towns in the state (see links below), and there's a train station to los angeles right next to pomona's campus
https://www.latimes.com/travel/story/2022-08-16/best-california-college-towns-things-to-do
https://www.bestcolleges.com/united-states/california/best-college-towns/
https://www.bestcollegereviews.org/50-best-college-towns-america/
https://www.collegemagazine.com/college-magazines-top-10-colleges-located-in-amazing-towns/
the beach is very far, though. that is true.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Other LACs: Pomona College (1,690 students) and Claremont McKenna College (1,350) students are attractive due to location, majors offered, and part of a consortium.
I went to Pomona and at least when I went there, the location wasn't that great. Incredibly smoggy all the time, like you're always sucking on an exhaust pipe. The town of Claremont isn't very interesting, nowhere good to walk to. Very far from the beach, 45 minutes drive to LA, out of the question unless you have a car. Same applies to the other colleges in the consortium.
This is very helpful information.
About 8 or 9 years ago, I raised the issue of air pollution/smog with a former professor in the Claremont consortium. She dismissed any cncerns about smog so I thought that it might just be a problem during the summer months.
Thank you for the info.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Other LACs: Pomona College (1,690 students) and Claremont McKenna College (1,350) students are attractive due to location, majors offered, and part of a consortium.
I went to Pomona and at least when I went there, the location wasn't that great. Incredibly smoggy all the time, like you're always sucking on an exhaust pipe. The town of Claremont isn't very interesting, nowhere good to walk to. Very far from the beach, 45 minutes drive to LA, out of the question unless you have a car. Same applies to the other colleges in the consortium.
By location, I meant in relation to the other colleges in the consortium. I should have been more clear in my other post.
Anonymous wrote:Other LACs: Pomona College (1,690 students) and Claremont McKenna College (1,350) students are attractive due to location, majors offered, and part of a consortium.
I went to Pomona and at least when I went there, the location wasn't that great. Incredibly smoggy all the time, like you're always sucking on an exhaust pipe. The town of Claremont isn't very interesting, nowhere good to walk to. Very far from the beach, 45 minutes drive to LA, out of the question unless you have a car. Same applies to the other colleges in the consortium.
Anonymous wrote:Other LACs: Pomona College (1,690 students) and Claremont McKenna College (1,350) students are attractive due to location, majors offered, and part of a consortium.
I went to Pomona and at least when I went there, the location wasn't that great. Incredibly smoggy all the time, like you're always sucking on an exhaust pipe. The town of Claremont isn't very interesting, nowhere good to walk to. Very far from the beach, 45 minutes drive to LA, out of the question unless you have a car. Same applies to the other colleges in the consortium.
Other LACs: Pomona College (1,690 students) and Claremont McKenna College (1,350) students are attractive due to location, majors offered, and part of a consortium.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Econ majors at the top half of schools (Williams, Amherst, Bowdoin, Middlebury, Colby, etc.) have strong connections to Wall Street compared to comparable schools
I went to Williams and Williams and Amherst have better reputations than Bowdoin, Midd, and Colby. It's not close!
Eew.
If you are truly a Williams grad, please consider this having the opposite of the desired effect.
Maybe you don’t belong at Williams.
Maybe my opinion of Williams was too generous if it doesn’t instill the value of humility or plain ol’ good taste.
The best schools are respected despite random alumni displays of excessive arrogance (like saying closely ranked schools are not even close in reputation), not because of them. It shouldn’t be beyond your education to appreciate how the chest thumping diminishes the very brand you yearn to promote.
What are talking about? Williams and Amherst are academically more rigorous and their Econ programs (also PoliEc at Williams) are much stronger. Econ is the most popular major at Williams and the faculty are outstanding. There is also a small Econ grad program. For students who are passionate about Econ or PoliEc there is a lot to offer. And in terms of Wall Street connections, if you look at the first-year IBD analyst classes at GS, MS, JPM, etc. you probably won't see many kids from Colby or Bowdoin. If you knew anything about these schools - and their Econ programs - you would be contributing to the conversation instead of going on about chest thumping.
And I'm not trying to "boost" Williams. I don't care if your kid applies to Williams. I'm an alum, not an admissions officer. I'm responding to a statement about the quality of Econ programs at a few NESCACs.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Econ majors at the top half of schools (Williams, Amherst, Bowdoin, Middlebury, Colby, etc.) have strong connections to Wall Street compared to comparable schools
I went to Williams and Williams and Amherst have better reputations than Bowdoin, Midd, and Colby. It's not close!
Eew.
If you are truly a Williams grad, please consider this having the opposite of the desired effect.
Maybe you don’t belong at Williams.
Maybe my opinion of Williams was too generous if it doesn’t instill the value of humility or plain ol’ good taste.
The best schools are respected despite random alumni displays of excessive arrogance (like saying closely ranked schools are not even close in reputation), not because of them. It shouldn’t be beyond your education to appreciate how the chest thumping diminishes the very brand you yearn to promote.
What are talking about? Williams and Amherst are academically more rigorous and their Econ programs (also PoliEc at Williams) are much stronger. Econ is the most popular major at Williams and the faculty are outstanding. There is also a small Econ grad program. For students who are passionate about Econ or PoliEc there is a lot to offer. And in terms of Wall Street connections, if you look at the first-year IBD analyst classes at GS, MS, JPM, etc. you probably won't see many kids from Colby or Bowdoin. If you knew anything about these schools - and their Econ programs - you would be contributing to the conversation instead of going on about chest thumping.
And I'm not trying to "boost" Williams. I don't care if your kid applies to Williams. I'm an alum, not an admissions officer. I'm responding to a statement about the quality of Econ programs at a few NESCACs.
Econ literally doesn't appear in the title of this thread or the in the original post's question. Your "I went to Williams and Williams and Amherst have better reputations than Bowdoin, Midd, and Colby. It's not even close!" did not qualify the claim only in the context of Econ. Similarly, you are saying now that Williams and Amherst are more rigorous. More rigorous in everything? Just Econ? Say so if that's what you mean.
But even in the context of Econ, you are indeed just chest thumping if you don't provide more than anecdotes about how your school is so much better than other elite (top 10 in the case of two!) schools "it's not close!". To think doing is "contributing to the conversation" is misguided, because you are giving people a reason to hold your college in lower esteem, not higher.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Econ majors at the top half of schools (Williams, Amherst, Bowdoin, Middlebury, Colby, etc.) have strong connections to Wall Street compared to comparable schools
I went to Williams and Williams and Amherst have better reputations than Bowdoin, Midd, and Colby. It's not close!
Eew.
If you are truly a Williams grad, please consider this having the opposite of the desired effect.
Maybe you don’t belong at Williams.
Maybe my opinion of Williams was too generous if it doesn’t instill the value of humility or plain ol’ good taste.
The best schools are respected despite random alumni displays of excessive arrogance (like saying closely ranked schools are not even close in reputation), not because of them. It shouldn’t be beyond your education to appreciate how the chest thumping diminishes the very brand you yearn to promote.
What are talking about? Williams and Amherst are academically more rigorous and their Econ programs (also PoliEc at Williams) are much stronger. Econ is the most popular major at Williams and the faculty are outstanding. There is also a small Econ grad program. For students who are passionate about Econ or PoliEc there is a lot to offer. And in terms of Wall Street connections, if you look at the first-year IBD analyst classes at GS, MS, JPM, etc. you probably won't see many kids from Colby or Bowdoin. If you knew anything about these schools - and their Econ programs - you would be contributing to the conversation instead of going on about chest thumping.
And I'm not trying to "boost" Williams. I don't care if your kid applies to Williams. I'm an alum, not an admissions officer. I'm responding to a statement about the quality of Econ programs at a few NESCACs.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Econ majors at the top half of schools (Williams, Amherst, Bowdoin, Middlebury, Colby, etc.) have strong connections to Wall Street compared to comparable schools
I went to Williams and Williams and Amherst have better reputations than Bowdoin, Midd, and Colby. It's not close!
Eew.
If you are truly a Williams grad, please consider this having the opposite of the desired effect.
Maybe you don’t belong at Williams.
Maybe my opinion of Williams was too generous if it doesn’t instill the value of humility or plain ol’ good taste.
The best schools are respected despite random alumni displays of excessive arrogance (like saying closely ranked schools are not even close in reputation), not because of them. It shouldn’t be beyond your education to appreciate how the chest thumping diminishes the very brand you yearn to promote.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Econ majors at the top half of schools (Williams, Amherst, Bowdoin, Middlebury, Colby, etc.) have strong connections to Wall Street compared to comparable schools
I went to Williams and Williams and Amherst have better reputations than Bowdoin, Midd, and Colby. It's not close!
Eew.
If you are truly a Williams grad, please consider this having the opposite of the desired effect.
Maybe you don’t belong at Williams.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Econ majors at the top half of schools (Williams, Amherst, Bowdoin, Middlebury, Colby, etc.) have strong connections to Wall Street compared to comparable schools
I went to Williams and Williams and Amherst have better reputations than Bowdoin, Midd, and Colby. It's not close!