Anonymous wrote:https://news.colby.edu/story/class-of-2027-admitted-to-colby/
6% admitted, considerably down from 28% nine years agoLower than Swarthmore, Bowdoin, Williams, and Amherst...
Anonymous wrote:It’s all about ED2. Everyone I know who has gone and especially this year are those who didn’t get into Bowdoin or Middlebury in ED1. Still selective, but a back up for the more selective.
Anonymous wrote:A poster said that because Colby students aren't known for being focused on career, it was like a continuation of high school. At first, I thought that was quite the insult. Then, well maybe?
DC attended a small (relative to public) and rigorous private school with strong faculty relationships and community. So, yes, it's been quite a similar experience at Colby. And I think that's great.
He knows each of his teachers and advisors from both majors well -- just as he did at his DC private. He shows up if they do a reading from their recently published book or goes to dinner with a visiting lecturer. He's been networked in (through the amazing Davis Connects) to some fantastic internships and study abroad. He found a challenging and unexpected second major that is "for fun." Like most Colby students, he glories in the outdoor life of hiking and skiing. While he is working hard, he is also having the time of his young life.
He'll soon go on to graduate school at a much bigger place where he'll experience thrill of being utterly unrecognized by his professors. But that'll be just fine. Because he'll be a 22 year old who is confident and well prepared. He'll have tired of life in rural Maine and be ready for the adrenalin of the big city.
While he is ambitious, he also knows that life is long. It should not be a rush to build the resume. Colby has given him the ability to explore his interests and come to a gradual decision about how he wants to spend his professional life.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The investment that school is making/has made in the past couple of years is unbelievable. The athletic center is like something you’d see in the Big Ten. Up and coming is the phrase that comes to mind.
Right? Toured it in summer 2021 and I still can't get the shiny gleam of it out of my mind on a hot, sunny day.
DC didn't like the school and I think that was due to the tour guide, who can be the most unpredictable variable in this process.
Will be interesting to see how things turn out in their collaboration with the adjoining town.
The pool is fantastic. One of my kids high school goes there. Not the sharpest or nicest person, but ED and full pay.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The investment that school is making/has made in the past couple of years is unbelievable. The athletic center is like something you’d see in the Big Ten. Up and coming is the phrase that comes to mind.
Right? Toured it in summer 2021 and I still can't get the shiny gleam of it out of my mind on a hot, sunny day.
DC didn't like the school and I think that was due to the tour guide, who can be the most unpredictable variable in this process.
Will be interesting to see how things turn out in their collaboration with the adjoining town.
Anonymous wrote:It’s free to apply to Colby. Free. Free. So lots of kids send an application because it’s Free! So they get lots of applications for a teeny tiny school in freezing Maine. Did I mention it’s free to apply.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Do they admit a large percentage through ED? If so, their overall admit rate will be very low. Especially if they don’t charge an application fee and/or require supplemental essays. Not sure what Colby does.
No fee or supplemental essay. They exploit the system as much as possible to push their acceptance rate low.
This. It’s all about marketing
The Colby campus, new facilities (athletic and performing arts), new initiatives (in AI and arts) are the marketing. It’s a college that is gaining popularity and notoriety among high school students.
I agree. Downright notorious.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Do they admit a large percentage through ED? If so, their overall admit rate will be very low. Especially if they don’t charge an application fee and/or require supplemental essays. Not sure what Colby does.
No fee or supplemental essay. They exploit the system as much as possible to push their acceptance rate low.
This. It’s all about marketing
The Colby campus, new facilities (athletic and performing arts), new initiatives (in AI and arts) are the marketing. It’s a college that is gaining popularity and notoriety among high school students.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:First, those saying Colby is an "over-rated school", that is BS, it is as relatively fine as any in the Nescac. It has an excellent faculty as all Nescacs do, and a top record of professional and grad school success.
Second, acceptance rate is not included in the USN rankings, so this has nothing to do with Colby "gaming" anything.
Third, and most importantly, a top college decides to make an expensive and difficult process a little cheaper and easier on you and your kids, and you are effing complaining about it.
Unbelievable. You people are unbelievable.
What’s unbelievable is that they made the application process easier just cuz they are so damn thoughtful.
Anonymous wrote:First, those saying Colby is an "over-rated school", that is BS, it is as relatively fine as any in the Nescac. It has an excellent faculty as all Nescacs do, and a top record of professional and grad school success.
Second, acceptance rate is not included in the USN rankings, so this has nothing to do with Colby "gaming" anything.
Third, and most importantly, a top college decides to make an expensive and difficult process a little cheaper and easier on you and your kids, and you are effing complaining about it.
Unbelievable. You people are unbelievable.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Just returned from graduation of great Colby kids. The ease of admission process clearly swelled the applicant ranks, but the bottom line is that the average SAT is now over 1500, and now the students' ability is on a par with the other leading New England schools like Dartmouth, Amherst, Bowdoin, Yale, etc.
Most seemed to lack professional plans, but they seemed a joyful lot.
This is an important consideration that suggests for many that the experience is mostly a continuation of high school.
Oh jeezus h.
Yeah, only little Colby has kids who don't express their future plans to a near stranger.... WTF is it with you people? Is it rejection bitterness?
Two seconds of google: "93% of the Class of 2022 were employed or in graduate school within six months of graduation."
https://afa.colby.edu/outcomes/#:~:text=Colby%20graduates%20earn%20a%20median,within%20six%20months%20of%20graduation.
Whatever it is, your points are pathetic and WEAK.
Please consider enrolling in anger management therapy.