Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Lots of SLACs fit the bill—unless not enough prestigious for you?
Which ones?
I have a kid who is a great athlete who is being recruited at two Top10 SLACs and several Top30.
I know Haverford, Swarthmore, Carleton and Colgate put on the academic pressure and I don't want that for my son who has ADHD and feels serious AP burnout in high school as he ends his jr year.
I'm always on the lookout for a SLAC that has a decent reputation but isn't out to kill these kid's spirit. I don't just mean that they give support. That's part of it. I mean which schools don't pile on the work to the point of exhaustion. My opinion based on our own tours is that it might depend more on the professor than the school. The major also matters. Kids on a premed track who have to take organic chemistry are going to suffer no matter where they are.
If someone disagrees, I'd love to hear it.
Anonymous wrote:If you're DC is looking for a SLAC, it's hard to beat Davidson for work/life/prestige balance. Amazing career services, too.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Lots of SLACs fit the bill—unless not enough prestigious for you?
Which ones?
I have a kid who is a great athlete who is being recruited at two Top10 SLACs and several Top30.
I know Haverford, Swarthmore, Carleton and Colgate put on the academic pressure and I don't want that for my son who has ADHD and feels serious AP burnout in high school as he ends his jr year.
I'm always on the lookout for a SLAC that has a decent reputation but isn't out to kill these kid's spirit. I don't just mean that they give support. That's part of it. I mean which schools don't pile on the work to the point of exhaustion. My opinion based on our own tours is that it might depend more on the professor than the school. The major also matters. Kids on a premed track who have to take organic chemistry are going to suffer no matter where they are.
If someone disagrees, I'd love to hear it.
Anonymous wrote:Haverford, Swarthmore, Carleton and Colgate
Anonymous wrote:Lots of SLACs fit the bill—unless not enough prestigious for you?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If your kid jumps through all the high school hoops required to get into a Top 25 university, college is almost certainly going to be a much lower intensity environment than high school, regardless of where they go
Not true at all
Anonymous wrote:If your kid jumps through all the high school hoops required to get into a Top 25 university, college is almost certainly going to be a much lower intensity environment than high school, regardless of where they go
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Id imagine the smaller schools that are extensions of prep schools -- i.e. Bates, Colby, Bucknell etc. have a less pressure cooker environment. They are less rigorous than Middlebury, Bowdoin etc. but still sort of in the same bracket -- elite SLAC adjacent.
It's so dismissive to call these schools "extensions of prep schools." I bet if a 17-year-old is attending a prep school, you're impressed by their academic pedigree, but if an 18-year-old attends a SLAC, you think they're a slacker.
I think PP could have been more careful with their wording, but IME it’s 100% true that if you went to Andover Exeter etc, a SLAC is going to have a really similar feel. There’s nothing wrong with that - plenty of my classmates went on to matriculate at SLACs and it was perfectly respectable. But believe it or not, they are similar settings, just with more public drunkenness added in.
So for the 400 seniors at Andover and the 300 at Exeter, these schools might be more of the same. But they're not more of the same for most of the rest of the 3.8 million seniors graduating every year.
Maybe better just to say that Andover and Exeter are like SLACs for pre-college students?
Anonymous wrote:Seriously depends on the major. Business or soft science majors are more laid back across schools. The most pressure-cooker schools are full of STEM kids
Anonymous wrote: A prestigious (highly selective as defined here) school without pressure is like magically delicious chocolate cake without calories.
And if you find either one, please let me know.