Anonymous wrote:Notre Dame. Great community feel, friendly, collaborative. Being from cut throat DC area, it is a breath of fresh air. My son has made lifelong friends and may have met his future wife. Her family is from Chicago, very wealthy, and the most lovely down to earth people...you would never get the sense they have that much money. We are pleased and hope to send our younger one there!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Caltech and MIT
Midwestern schools
+1 Yep.
Good Lord, not MIT! It's dog eat dog (I went up the river to Harvard).
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Caltech and MIT
Midwestern schools
+1 Yep.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:So, only liberal arts colleges??
Maybe not only liberal arts colleges, but it stands to reason that with their smaller sizes, they might be able to select for a particular ethos in the student body and then attract new students on that basis. So if 80% of students at a 2000-person school are down-to-earth, that's pretty pervasive in the student body, even if it's only 1,6000 people. As someone else said, you can no doubt find many down-to-earth students at large universities as well. If 10% of students at a 40,000-person university are down-to-earth, that's a larger number. But do they pervade the school? Probably less likely.
80% of students are down to earth, but have parents willing and able to afford a liberal arts education for their children? That seems very unlikely to me.
Definitely not SLACs. Too expensive. State schools are where you find the down to earth
SLACs with a lot of money that spend it on enabling non-kids people to attend (e.g., Grinnell).
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:So, only liberal arts colleges??
Maybe not only liberal arts colleges, but it stands to reason that with their smaller sizes, they might be able to select for a particular ethos in the student body and then attract new students on that basis. So if 80% of students at a 2000-person school are down-to-earth, that's pretty pervasive in the student body, even if it's only 1,6000 people. As someone else said, you can no doubt find many down-to-earth students at large universities as well. If 10% of students at a 40,000-person university are down-to-earth, that's a larger number. But do they pervade the school? Probably less likely.
80% of students are down to earth, but have parents willing and able to afford a liberal arts education for their children? That seems very unlikely to me.
Definitely not SLACs. Too expensive. State schools are where you find the down to earth
Anonymous wrote:Caltech and MIT
Midwestern schools
Anonymous wrote:Swarthmore