Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I'd say they are about the same. Colby is #18 (tied with Colgate and Smith) US News Liberal Arts Colleges, Bates is #22. For comparison - Williams #1, Pomona #4, Vassar #10, Wesleyan #17, Oberlin #26, Bucknell and Kenyon tied for #32, Sewanee #36, Dickinson, Gettysburg and Franklin and Marshall tied for #46, Denison #49.
Not that I think these rankings are the end-all and be-all, but they give you an idea of how the schools are regarded by businesses and grad school (since there are a fair number in this area that don't seem to know much about liberal arts colleges).
It's shocking when you consider for a moment that an also-ran, number 3-position weekly news magazine that used to be known as "Useless News & World Distort" (do they even publish anymore?) now exerts such influence over college adminstrators, applicants and parents.
See bold above. It's a guideline. Other rankings are quite similar.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I'd say they are about the same. Colby is #18 (tied with Colgate and Smith) US News Liberal Arts Colleges, Bates is #22. For comparison - Williams #1, Pomona #4, Vassar #10, Wesleyan #17, Oberlin #26, Bucknell and Kenyon tied for #32, Sewanee #36, Dickinson, Gettysburg and Franklin and Marshall tied for #46, Denison #49.
Not that I think these rankings are the end-all and be-all, but they give you an idea of how the schools are regarded by businesses and grad school (since there are a fair number in this area that don't seem to know much about liberal arts colleges).
It's shocking when you consider for a moment that an also-ran, number 3-position weekly news magazine that used to be known as "Useless News & World Distort" (do they even publish anymore?) now exerts such influence over college adminstrators, applicants and parents.
Anonymous wrote:I'd say they are about the same. Colby is #18 (tied with Colgate and Smith) US News Liberal Arts Colleges, Bates is #22. For comparison - Williams #1, Pomona #4, Vassar #10, Wesleyan #17, Oberlin #26, Bucknell and Kenyon tied for #32, Sewanee #36, Dickinson, Gettysburg and Franklin and Marshall tied for #46, Denison #49.
Not that I think these rankings are the end-all and be-all, but they give you an idea of how the schools are regarded by businesses and grad school (since there are a fair number in this area that don't seem to know much about liberal arts colleges).
Anonymous wrote:A word of note about SLAC's.....my sister went to Swarthmore, interviewed at Microsoft...and one of her interviewers at Redmond asked her if it was a high-school.
And that's one of the top 3 lac's in the country and a top-10 feeder to elite grad programs as well as school that has the best GMAT scores by average score (740).
And I remember her telling me the team she interviewed at MS was ultra smart and MS was a top experience. So if geeks don't know a school ranked that high with that much history...LAC's do have some huge branding/visibility concerns.
Anonymous wrote:Do kids that go to Bates or Colby have a chip on their shoulder about Bowdoin? Like how AU and GW students might about Georgetown?
Anonymous wrote:Do kids that go to Bates or Colby have a chip on their shoulder about Bowdoin? Like how AU and GW students might about Georgetown?
Anonymous wrote:A word of note about SLAC's.....my sister went to Swarthmore, interviewed at Microsoft...and one of her interviewers at Redmond asked her if it was a high-school.
And that's one of the top 3 lac's in the country and a top-10 feeder to elite grad programs as well as school that has the best GMAT scores by average score (740).
And I remember her telling me the team she interviewed at MS was ultra smart and MS was a top experience. So if geeks don't know a school ranked that high with that much history...LAC's do have some huge branding/visibility concerns.
Anonymous wrote:I'd say they are about the same. Colby is #18 (tied with Colgate and Smith) US News Liberal Arts Colleges, Bates is #22. For comparison - Williams #1, Pomona #4, Vassar #10, Wesleyan #17, Oberlin #26, Bucknell and Kenyon tied for #32, Sewanee #36, Dickinson, Gettysburg and Franklin and Marshall tied for #46, Denison #49.
Not that I think these rankings are the end-all and be-all, but they give you an idea of how the schools are regarded by businesses and grad school (since there are a fair number in this area that don't seem to know much about liberal arts colleges).[/quote
Sorry, the "fair number" I was referring to above is a fair number of people NOT a fair number of graduate schools.
Anonymous wrote:There is a big difference in the financial strength of the two schools. Colby FY 2012 endowment: $599,557,000, Bates: $216,156,000. Colby annual fund raising 2012: $20,299,115, Bates: $11,903,757.
http://www.nacubo.org/Documents/research/2012NCSEPublicTablesEndowmentMarketValuesRevisedFebruary42013.pdf
http://www.cae.org/content/pdf/Top_Twenty_and_By_State_2012.pdf