Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Oberlin produced 4 Nobel prize winners. I believe 3 were in sciences and the 2021 one in economics. The first was by Robert Millikan. He was the first president of Caltech. Oberlin is hard to beat.
Great information. I googled this.The Nobel prizes won by Oberlin graduates were in 1923, the 1930s, 1945, and, most recently,in 2021 for economics.
I found this: https://bestmastersprograms.org/most-nobel-prize-winners/ is there a list focusing just on LACs regarding Nobelprize affiliations ? TIA
Anonymous wrote:The science majors I met while touring Kenyon seemed to have amazing undergraduate research experiences and other support from the college. I was particularly impressed with the number of female science majors in hard sciences.
Anonymous wrote:Oberlin produced 4 Nobel prize winners. I believe 3 were in sciences and the 2021 one in economics. The first was by Robert Millikan. He was the first president of Caltech. Oberlin is hard to beat.
Anonymous wrote:Just to be clear: Visit Oberlin College while school is in session--not during any breaks.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Of the three, Oberlin probably has the strongest science departments. A lot of its students go on to PhD programs.
+1. I have an Obie in a sciences field who is planning to work for a year and get a PhD. Two years of research with a prof. Plus a summer of research. Who is their “mentor” and a co-author on 1-2 papers. A study abroad with a research component specific to their interest. Getting ready to present at a conference. Is working with the school on their personal statement. After the Conservatory, sciences is Oberlin’s strongest area.
That said, my kid also applied to Mac and Kenyon and was accepted, also with merit. Kenyon is lovely, but more remote and stronger in humanities (esp writing and English) than science. I think that’s your third place choice in terms of science pre-PhD.
I loved Mac, which had a lovely, walkable suburban campus and was also strong in my kid’s area of science. But neither my kid, nor their sibling 3 years later, liked the school when they visited. It was very, very white. Sibling also passed on Oberlin.
Mac and Oberlin are schools you need to visit. I will cheerlead Oberlin’s science department. But doing well at Oberlin is really about fit, so I would never insist it’s the best school for your specific kid. You also need to visit Mac. Not sure why it raised such negative feelings in my kids— maybe the lack of diversity after the DMV?
That's great! May I ask what STEM field your kid is currently pursuing?
Anonymous wrote:My kid also like Macalester until his visit. We were surprised at the turnaround.
Anonymous wrote:I think these are all likely places my strong in science and math child will apply. They love history too. Any thoughts or experience with science post-grad outcomes and which might be better for a well rounded but analytically gifted sort of student?
Appreciate positive comments, please.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Of the three, Oberlin probably has the strongest science departments. A lot of its students go on to PhD programs.
+1. I have an Obie in a sciences field who is planning to work for a year and get a PhD. Two years of research with a prof. Plus a summer of research. Who is their “mentor” and a co-author on 1-2 papers. A study abroad with a research component specific to their interest. Getting ready to present at a conference. Is working with the school on their personal statement. After the Conservatory, sciences is Oberlin’s strongest area.
That said, my kid also applied to Mac and Kenyon and was accepted, also with merit. Kenyon is lovely, but more remote and stronger in humanities (esp writing and English) than science. I think that’s your third place choice in terms of science pre-PhD.
I loved Mac, which had a lovely, walkable suburban campus and was also strong in my kid’s area of science. But neither my kid, nor their sibling 3 years later, liked the school when they visited. It was very, very white. Sibling also passed on Oberlin.
Mac and Oberlin are schools you need to visit. I will cheerlead Oberlin’s science department. But doing well at Oberlin is really about fit, so I would never insist it’s the best school for your specific kid. You also need to visit Mac. Not sure why it raised such negative feelings in my kids— maybe the lack of diversity after the DMV?