Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:LACs often feel like they need to prove that they’re strong in STEM; people don’t understand that the liberal arts include most STEM disciplines (except for engineering), so the schools sometimes overcompensate on tours. And as another person mentioned, science buildings are often the shiniest and most impressive.
I would recommend doing deeper research into their humanities offerings before discarding these excellent schools.
I think people are right in correcting op, but they aren’t totally wrong. As a grad of one of the institutions they mentioned, there’s so much more emphasis on science and math than the past. My Alma mater went from a very humanities heavy institution to a majority Econ-math college that just doesn’t reflect the college I went to.
It’s really disheartening to see how pre professional students are. I get consistent LinkedIn requests asking for coffee chats and career advice and this only started in the past 10 or so years.
Can totally see this.
Conversation I recently had with a Student at my Alma mater:
“How was the career center when you were a student”
“Career center? It didn’t exist? We probably would’ve laughed if anyone entered a career center back then”
“Well, how did you get jobs?”
“We just…did.”
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:LACs often feel like they need to prove that they’re strong in STEM; people don’t understand that the liberal arts include most STEM disciplines (except for engineering), so the schools sometimes overcompensate on tours. And as another person mentioned, science buildings are often the shiniest and most impressive.
I would recommend doing deeper research into their humanities offerings before discarding these excellent schools.
I think people are right in correcting op, but they aren’t totally wrong. As a grad of one of the institutions they mentioned, there’s so much more emphasis on science and math than the past. My Alma mater went from a very humanities heavy institution to a majority Econ-math college that just doesn’t reflect the college I went to.
It’s really disheartening to see how pre professional students are. I get consistent LinkedIn requests asking for coffee chats and career advice and this only started in the past 10 or so years.
Anonymous wrote:LACs often feel like they need to prove that they’re strong in STEM; people don’t understand that the liberal arts include most STEM disciplines (except for engineering), so the schools sometimes overcompensate on tours. And as another person mentioned, science buildings are often the shiniest and most impressive.
I would recommend doing deeper research into their humanities offerings before discarding these excellent schools.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Georgetown
Weird answer. A school best known for its foreign service, business, and health sciences offerings.
The College of Arts and Sciences is the largest school by far. English, history, government, international relations, religion/theology, philosophy, African-American Studies, theater—all strong and well-represented.
Largest, but not most prestigious or best-resourced.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Georgetown
Weird answer. A school best known for its foreign service, business, and health sciences offerings.
The College of Arts and Sciences is the largest school by far. English, history, government, international relations, religion/theology, philosophy, African-American Studies, theater—all strong and well-represented.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Georgetown
Weird answer. A school best known for its foreign service, business, and health sciences offerings.
Anonymous wrote:My kid is at one of those schools and has friends happily in humanities majors. Just because a school emphasizes the STEM offerings doesn't mean they're not strong for humanities.
Anonymous wrote:It's not either/or. There are many STEM types that have a deep and abiding interest in the humanities. From Einstein to Carl Sagan to Stephen Hawking and on and on. There's an old expression - God speaks in two languages: music and mathematics. A good university community will listen to both. A college that only pays attention to humanities is functionally deaf in one ear. But if that's their thing, maybe look into Bennington College. Or Hampshire College.