Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Colby has 20% students of color, 11% international students, and 12% first generation students.
I bet there is significant overlap there.
Anonymous wrote:Colby has 20% students of color, 11% international students, and 12% first generation students.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It's a sports league. Not sure grouping colleges that way is very useful.
nescac's as a group have more in common with each other than ivies, which wildly differ from each other.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It's a sports league. Not sure grouping colleges that way is very useful.
nescac's as a group have more in common with each other than ivies, which wildly differ from each other.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:While I can look up the data on diversity, when I visited, it felt like the setting of a Vineyard Vines look book shoot.
I have a son who is looking at colleges. Amherst seems to be the exception, or at least the most diverse of the NESCAC schools. They have a higher than usual number of American minorities and take and offer aid to what seems to me to be a large number of international students. Amherst, Harvard, Yale are among a small handful of schools that have needs-blind admissions for international students.
Anonymous wrote:It's a sports league. Not sure grouping colleges that way is very useful.
Anonymous wrote:It's a sports league. Not sure grouping colleges that way is very useful.
Anonymous wrote:Colby has 20% students of color, 11% international students, and 12% first generation students.
Anonymous wrote:Any have a smart but nice vibe?
Anonymous wrote:Any have a smart but nice vibe?