Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:East coast or west coast preferred, but happy to hear anywhere.
Your state flagship is good I'm sure. No sense paying $90k if you're going to pay for graduate school. These SLACs just impress other DCUM posters.
You don’t pay for graduate school in STEM.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:East coast or west coast preferred, but happy to hear anywhere.
Your state flagship is good I'm sure. No sense paying $90k if you're going to pay for graduate school. These SLACs just impress other DCUM posters.
You don’t pay for graduate school in STEM.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:East coast or west coast preferred, but happy to hear anywhere.
Your state flagship is good I'm sure. No sense paying $90k if you're going to pay for graduate school. These SLACs just impress other DCUM posters.
Anonymous wrote:East coast or west coast preferred, but happy to hear anywhere.
Anonymous wrote:OP: DS is pretty good in math and stem (all As), but not as well rounded (B/B+ in humanities).
Probably looking to get Masters and/or PhDs in pure math. I can see him in academia doing research.
TIA
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Like overall? The best are Princeton, MIT, Harvard, and Berkeley.
For smaller size I would add swarthmore
?? Swarthmore is not even the top lac for mathematics
That title easily goes to Williams!
Meh, I’d argue Harvey Mudd is clearly better at math. Same with Reed, Pomona, and potentially Swarthmore. Williams just get the title because of SMALL.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Like overall? The best are Princeton, MIT, Harvard, and Berkeley.
For smaller size I would add swarthmore
?? Swarthmore is not even the top lac for mathematics
That title easily goes to Williams!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP: DS is pretty good in math and stem (all As), but not as well rounded (B/B+ in humanities).
Probably looking to get Masters and/or PhDs in pure math. I can see him in academia doing research.
TIA
FYI "all As in math and science" in HS is not sufficient to thrive in pure math through grad school.
For that you should already have substantial interest in math beyond what school offers.
That's OK, though; there is a lot of non pure math opportunity in college too, and it is very appealing to students who enjoyed HS math.