Anonymous wrote:Miami of Ohio
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:URochester.
Honestly. You have completely described it. It’s set off to the side from Rochester (which isn’t much of a city anyway), beautiful walkable contained-feeling campus, minimal greek life (and what is there is nothing like the south), perfect size, and take a look at the flexible core curriculum.
Adding to this ... Syracuse?
Might be a little more Greek than she wants, but it's not oppressive.
Cornell if she has the stats.
Anonymous wrote:URochester.
Honestly. You have completely described it. It’s set off to the side from Rochester (which isn’t much of a city anyway), beautiful walkable contained-feeling campus, minimal greek life (and what is there is nothing like the south), perfect size, and take a look at the flexible core curriculum.
OP said not religious....BC is Jesuit but (like Georgetown) not overly religious in action. It's actually in a positive way, encouraging community, giving, ethics...and lack of Greek is nice (yet, still a strong social scene and much school spirit).Anonymous wrote:Emory is mid-size and suburban-feeling. Claremont Colleges are in a suburb and although each school is small, the Consortium makes it mid-size. Others to consider are Tufts, Boston College, William and Mary, and Wake Forest.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Mid-size, secular, with less focus on Greek, not totally urban.
A good chunk of top 20 privates
CMU
Tufts
U Rochester
Case Western
U Miami
RPI
American
U Denver
Clark
Among LACs (naturally toward the smaller side), perhaps:
Wesleyan
U Richmond
Colorado College
Rhodes
If you would be open to schools that are technically religious but not proselytizing, that merely require a theology course from a historical or philosophical, perspective, checking out Jesuit schools would add a lot to the list.
Thanks for this great list!!! Some of those are urban which my DD really doesn't like because she thinks that means less of a campus community.
Most of those are not what I would consider urban. (Maybe CMU.) The rest all have a defined campus, which is what it sounds like she is seeking, with the surrounding area being more suburban in feeling, more on the edge of urban, outskirts, not actually urban. (Just for the purpose of defining urban, when I think urban, I think NYU, BU, GWU, Northeastern. And among those, Northeastern still has a defined campus, unlike the other three, though it is too large for what you are looking for.)
Disagree about CMU--it too has a pretty contained campus, and it's in a very residential part of Pittburgh.
Anonymous wrote:Tufts is big
Wesleyan is hard to get into
Conn College?
Kenyon?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Mid-size, secular, with less focus on Greek, not totally urban.
A good chunk of top 20 privates
CMU
Tufts
U Rochester
Case Western
U Miami
RPI
American
U Denver
Clark
Among LACs (naturally toward the smaller side), perhaps:
Wesleyan
U Richmond
Colorado College
Rhodes
If you would be open to schools that are technically religious but not proselytizing, that merely require a theology course from a historical or philosophical, perspective, checking out Jesuit schools would add a lot to the list.
Thanks for this great list!!! Some of those are urban which my DD really doesn't like because she thinks that means less of a campus community.
Most of those are not what I would consider urban. (Maybe CMU.) The rest all have a defined campus, which is what it sounds like she is seeking, with the surrounding area being more suburban in feeling, more on the edge of urban, outskirts, not actually urban. (Just for the purpose of defining urban, when I think urban, I think NYU, BU, GWU, Northeastern. And among those, Northeastern still has a defined campus, unlike the other three, though it is too large for what you are looking for.)