Anonymous wrote:I have a niece who transferred out a couple of years ago. She came from a top private in the Philly area, but said that the social environment was dominated by very rich, very white New England boarding school students, who treated Colby as a continuation of boarding school. With it being a small school in the middle of nowhere, she felt very isolated and left after freshman year for another SLAC with a more diverse student body and less of the prep school vibe.
I do think people get taken in by the very low admission rate, but as others have said, that seems to reflect a very aggressive marketing campaign designed to boost numbers. But it seems like the actual students are the same rich NE boarding school grads that Colby has always relied on to pay the bills.
Anonymous wrote:Since nobody has said this yet, I will -- if your kid wants to go to law school, they should focus on getting the highest gpa and lsat score they can. Outside of yale law, nothing else matters. If colby is known to be "rigorous" and "grad schools know this" (translation - it's difficult to get good grades), steer clear. Law schools don't care if you went to colby, swarthmore, or state u.
Also, as a neutral observer here, particularly since your kid is considering grad school, think really hard about whether you want to full pay for a small-name lac. Did your kid get money somewhere comparable? Or could they do honors college at a bigger public? It sounds like the finances will be a stretch and I wouldn't do that for colby.[/quote
This +1000
Think about the long game. Colby is very expensive ($254,000) and is filled with rich kids. Nothing wrong with that, but add to the undergrad minimum costs expensive travel abroad, spring breaks, travel, clothes, etc. Law school will cost another $220,000-$300,000 unless they get top top grades at Colby and ace the LSAT so they qualify for merit aid. Business School could possibly be paid for by a company, but if not that will run another $120,000-$150,000 grand.
Having just gone through this with my DC, who attended State School, is not at a top 5 Law School, and will graduate debt free, the trade off of graduating Law School debt free (and us not using every penny of our savings for undergrad) is life changing all around.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:8% acceptance this year so she must be a great student! My daughter and I loved Colby. Very sporty, outdoorsy, prep-school vibe. Lovely campus, cute downtown that appears to be on the rise (look up Colby’s investment in downtown Waterville), amazing new sports facility. Maine is a special place and it gets into people’s souls. I don’t know anyone who’s spent significant time there who doesn’t hold it close to their heart.
selectivity figures don’t mean all that much anymore since private schools throw money at marketeers who say and do anything to get students to apply in order to turn them down. That makes the selectivity percentage drop, which is then reported to USN&WR
Name a school with a less than 10% acceptance rate that isn’t excellent. I’ll wait.
Alice Lloyd College of Kentucky. Its 7 percent acceptance rate is lower than Colby's.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:8% acceptance this year so she must be a great student! My daughter and I loved Colby. Very sporty, outdoorsy, prep-school vibe. Lovely campus, cute downtown that appears to be on the rise (look up Colby’s investment in downtown Waterville), amazing new sports facility. Maine is a special place and it gets into people’s souls. I don’t know anyone who’s spent significant time there who doesn’t hold it close to their heart.
selectivity figures don’t mean all that much anymore since private schools throw money at marketeers who say and do anything to get students to apply in order to turn them down. That makes the selectivity percentage drop, which is then reported to USN&WR
Name a school with a less than 10% acceptance rate that isn’t excellent. I’ll wait.