Anonymous
Post 06/15/2026 12:06     Subject: Big or small school for academic "Chad"

Try Dook. Your kid will fit right in with the rest of the douchebags.
Anonymous
Post 06/15/2026 12:04     Subject: Re:Big or small school for academic "Chad"

At our Wake tour, every boy looked like this. Typically fair, tall, athletic, etc.
Anonymous
Post 06/15/2026 11:55     Subject: Big or small school for academic "Chad"

Anonymous wrote:News flash, lots of popular kids go to college. So, your son may not be popular in college.

And going to a small school your DS is already behind since he isn't on a sports team.


Yes. Watch Mrs. Fletcher on HBO.
Anonymous
Post 06/15/2026 11:55     Subject: Big or small school for academic "Chad"

Anonymous wrote:I have a rising senior DS with high stats who is, to borrow a term I've seen on this forum and heard his generation use, a "Chad": athletic, handsome, square-jawed, confident, magnetic, good with girls. He's working on his college list and torn between big rah-rah schools and smaller, more intimate residential colleges. We've been going back and forth on the pros and cons of each. At a big school he'd almost certainly join, to use another term that was heretofore unfamiliar to me, a "touse" fraternity and have an active social and dating life, but in day to day life, walking between classes, and so forth, he'd ultimately be just another face in a sea of thousands, which would be a major culture shock for him. At a smaller school he'd likely rise to the top of the social ladder fast and become a "BMOC," but what are the chances he'll outgrow it or that a more a limited environment will constrain someone with his kind of personality?

He's looking to study econ or finance. Some of the schools on his list right now:

UVA
UNC-CH
UF
W&L
Davidson
Richmond
Wake

I like Wake as a bigger small school, and I know Elon fits that category too, though I'm not sure he'd be challenged academically at the latter. He doesn't want to go north or deal with anything colder than the DMV, which rules out places like Bucknell/Lafayette/Lehigh/Colgate.

What does everyone think for a kid like mine? Small school or big? Any other mid-sized options worth considering, like maybe Tulane or UMiami? Thanks in advance, and please keep any nasty comments to yourselves.


Coming soon to Netflix
Anonymous
Post 06/15/2026 11:47     Subject: Big or small school for academic "Chad"

Creepy. Sounds like DJT talking about Ivanka.
Anonymous
Post 06/15/2026 11:45     Subject: Big or small school for academic "Chad"

FSU even more huntin and fishin chaddines. Got to stay in Fl though.
Anonymous
Post 06/15/2026 11:39     Subject: Big or small school for academic "Chad"

Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:Sounds like he could use a bigger school to find out that he really isn't all that special.


+1 I remember seeing the formerly popular, confident kids from my high school walking around UVA and being surprised at how completely unremarkable they seemed in a new environment.


DP. My son was part of the popular crowd in high school. When he came home for Thanksgiving freshman year and reconvened with his buddies, I noticed two distinct camps. The first camp, the one that included my son, consisted of kids who had pledged a house. They were loving college and dishing out story after story about all the fun they were having on campus, where they walked around like veritable gods. The kids in the second camp hadn't pledged, expecting, I guess, for their high school popularity to carry them through the college social scene, which is, of course, delusional. They were exactly as you describe: shellshocked by their sudden irrelevance to their peers. They spent the weekend wistfully dredging up stories from the good old days of high school. Before my son returned to campus on Sunday, he mentioned that he had noticed the difference, too, and told me what a great decision it had been to pledge.
Anonymous
Post 06/15/2026 11:31     Subject: Big or small school for academic "Chad"

Can he join the pipeline to the street now?
Anonymous
Post 06/15/2026 11:27     Subject: Re:Big or small school for academic "Chad"

Anonymous wrote:If not a lax or football bro, avoid small schools unless he can walk on. They'll dominate the social scene.


This is true at NESCACs, maybe, but not at W&L, which is dominated by touse fraternities like KA, and they give plenty of bids to non-varsity-athletes. A Chad from a top DMV private would do just fine.
Anonymous
Post 06/15/2026 11:19     Subject: Big or small school for academic "Chad"

U. Florida is a Chad’s paradise.
Anonymous
Post 06/15/2026 11:14     Subject: Big or small school for academic "Chad"

Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:This is hilarious.


I laughed out loud several times.

Gold. Probably fake but total gold.


It was so good that I read it to my HYP son. Now I know what touse means.
Anonymous
Post 06/15/2026 11:14     Subject: Big or small school for academic "Chad"

In the off chance this is real, I'd also throw in a recommendation to go somewhere large. It will be a good learning experience for this kind of kid, but also give him many options of scenes to thrive in (in case his ego is bruised in his expected social scene).
Anonymous
Post 06/15/2026 11:10     Subject: Re:Big or small school for academic "Chad"

If not a lax or football bro, avoid small schools unless he can walk on. They'll dominate the social scene.
Anonymous
Post 06/15/2026 11:07     Subject: Big or small school for academic "Chad"

Anonymous wrote:I have a rising senior DS with high stats who is, to borrow a term I've seen on this forum and heard his generation use, a "Chad": athletic, handsome, square-jawed, confident, magnetic, good with girls. He's working on his college list and torn between big rah-rah schools and smaller, more intimate residential colleges. We've been going back and forth on the pros and cons of each. At a big school he'd almost certainly join, to use another term that was heretofore unfamiliar to me, a "touse" fraternity and have an active social and dating life, but in day to day life, walking between classes, and so forth, he'd ultimately be just another face in a sea of thousands, which would be a major culture shock for him. At a smaller school he'd likely rise to the top of the social ladder fast and become a "BMOC," but what are the chances he'll outgrow it or that a more a limited environment will constrain someone with his kind of personality?

He's looking to study econ or finance. Some of the schools on his list right now:

UVA
UNC-CH
UF
W&L
Davidson
Richmond
Wake

I like Wake as a bigger small school, and I know Elon fits that category too, though I'm not sure he'd be challenged academically at the latter. He doesn't want to go north or deal with anything colder than the DMV, which rules out places like Bucknell/Lafayette/Lehigh/Colgate.

What does everyone think for a kid like mine? Small school or big? Any other mid-sized options worth considering, like maybe Tulane or UMiami? Thanks in advance, and please keep any nasty comments to yourselves.


I am so fascinated by this post I can't stand it. I would love to meet the mama who wrote it.
Anonymous
Post 06/15/2026 11:05     Subject: Big or small school for academic "Chad"

Anonymous wrote:News flash, lots of popular kids go to college. So, your son may not be popular in college.

And going to a small school your DS is already behind since he isn't on a sports team.


The fact that you are triggered by this obvious fake post and then chime in with more insecure stupidity is why this troll posted in the first place. You are feeding the monster tasty snacks.