Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Among your average Joe, most SLACs will have zero name recognition. Zero. But to the people who hire the Joes of the world, govern the Joes of the world, and help direct the future of Joe's world on many different levels, yeah, they know. They'll know Williams. They'll know Grinnell. They'll know Oberlin.
Depends where you live, I think. I grew up in Colorado and even among the "elite"...Oberlin and Williams and Grinnell aren't exactly household names.
Anonymous wrote:Frankly, a lot will depend on your family and child's peer group. Highly educated (PhDs, tippy top JD and MBA programs, etc.) circles will know about these schools. The rest, unless they happened to live within the close vicinity of those schools, will not.
Anonymous wrote:Just about ALL LACs lack general name recognition -- even the "top" ones.
Anonymous wrote:Among your average Joe, most SLACs will have zero name recognition. Zero. But to the people who hire the Joes of the world, govern the Joes of the world, and help direct the future of Joe's world on many different levels, yeah, they know. They'll know Williams. They'll know Grinnell. They'll know Oberlin.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:There are very few truly universal names. I always say “Northwestern in Chicago” because so many people don’t know.
That's mighty confusing since Northwestern is not actually in Chicago.![]()
Northwestern is indeed in a close-in suburb of Chicago.
Maybe you're thinking of Northeastern (in Boston)?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:There are very few truly universal names. I always say “Northwestern in Chicago” because so many people don’t know.
That's mighty confusing since Northwestern is not actually in Chicago.![]()
Anonymous wrote:There are very few truly universal names. I always say “Northwestern in Chicago” because so many people don’t know.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I honestly think it depends on the LAC/SLAC and who you're talking to. I know all of these from colleagues who have gone to these schools (or now teach at these schools). They're not ones you hear about regularly outside of educated circles though.
OTOH the Seven Sisters schools are much more recognizable by a broader number of people. Heck, Vassar is often the college of choice for references in pop culture "I've had just about enough of your Vassar bashing young lady!" said Homer to Lisa....
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Parent of a Vassar student here. That line is a favorite family joke. (Though DC never bashes the college!)
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I’m taking about schools ranked 30-60. Specifically schools like Dickinson, Denison, Occidental, Bucknell, Rhodes. I know they’re all in different regions, but I just want to if they have that sort of “name recognition” that an employer looks at when reviewing an application.
Sorry to be nit-picky.
Those are by no means "mid-tier" LACs. Anything ranked in that range will have excellent name recognition with employers, recruiters and graduate schools.
I’m the OP.
Yes, I have to agree, but some people have different versions of what mid tier is, that’s why I put the rough numbers of 30-60. Thank you for the input though![]()
Anonymous wrote:I honestly think it depends on the LAC/SLAC and who you're talking to. I know all of these from colleagues who have gone to these schools (or now teach at these schools). They're not ones you hear about regularly outside of educated circles though.
OTOH the Seven Sisters schools are much more recognizable by a broader number of people. Heck, Vassar is often the college of choice for references in pop culture "I've had just about enough of your Vassar bashing young lady!" said Homer to Lisa....