Anonymous wrote:Claremont McKenna
Anonymous wrote:Claremont McKenna
Anonymous wrote:Swarthmore. Not surprisingly tons of Swatties went to the UofC for grad school in the 90s.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Claremont McKenna
Great school, but my friend with kid there now said it’s very preprofessional
“Preprofessional” like it’s an auto mechanic or dental hygienist school 🙄
Are we… pretending we don’t want our kids to have good jobs after they graduate?
No. I think it’s a question of relative focus. Some prefer an environment where there’s a discernible passion for academic exploration in depth and breadth, some prefer an environment where there’s comparatively more attention on specific career networking and entry. I think every school has a degree of both, some are known for more of one or the other.
Anonymous wrote:Who would know this? These questions are getting so ridiculous.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Claremont McKenna
This was probably intended as a joke or the poster who suggested CMC knows very little about CMC.
OP, you are seeking the opposite of CMC.
Reed College in Oregon.
Grinnell College in Iowa.
Bates College in Maine--maybe, but the academics are nowhere close to U Chicago, Reed, or Grinnell.
Wesleyan, Vassar, Oberlin if super liberal. Kenyon College in Ohio, but academics not anywhere near the level of U Chicago.
St. John's College in Santa Fe, New Mexico and in Annapolis, Maryland.
College of William & Mary in Virginia.
Brown due to super easy grading policies.
Anonymous wrote:Rice
Tufts
SLACs like Bates Bowdoin
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Claremont McKenna
This was probably intended as a joke or the poster who suggested CMC knows very little about CMC.
OP, you are seeking the opposite of CMC.
Reed College in Oregon.
Grinnell College in Iowa.
Bates College in Maine--maybe, but the academics are nowhere close to U Chicago, Reed, or Grinnell.
Wesleyan, Vassar, Oberlin if super liberal. Kenyon College in Ohio, but academics not anywhere near the level of U Chicago.
St. John's College in Santa Fe, New Mexico and in Annapolis, Maryland.
College of William & Mary in Virginia.
Brown due to super easy grading policies.
none of these are like the chicago of my day (class of 92)
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Claremont McKenna
Great school, but my friend with kid there now said it’s very preprofessional
“Preprofessional” like it’s an auto mechanic or dental hygienist school 🙄
Are we… pretending we don’t want our kids to have good jobs after they graduate?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:All top schools have pockets of consulting obsessed. So do many lower schools. It is just a trend. The smart intellectually curious types are still at all the top schools too, in large numbers
This. My kid is at UChicago. Lots of econ bros. But the old school intellectual is alive and well on campus.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Claremont McKenna
Great school, but my friend with kid there now said it’s very preprofessional
Anonymous wrote:All top schools have pockets of consulting obsessed. So do many lower schools. It is just a trend. The smart intellectually curious types are still at all the top schools too, in large numbers