Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:DD liked Muhlenberg so much that she dropped Brandeis and BC. Nice when your kid likes a safety better than targets. Very welcoming campus. Seems like great faculty, personal attention and actively tries to help students upon graduation w/ alumni networks and school affiliations. Some nice historic buildings on campus. Gorgeous dining hall. New green science building being built. Also, voted best food in PA!
The food is so bad. We visited this summer and the visit included lunch. Made me concerned about the other PA schools if it was rated best. I know people love the school but we were not impressed (apart from food I mean).
Are you kidding?! Their food is AMAZING! You must have strange taste, cuz that dining hall food is incredible.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Claremont McKenna. Super underrated here, but top notch academics, great quality of life, internships/opportunities abound, alumni network + top outcomes.
Not a hidden gem. It’s a very elite college. You people know nothing!
It is not well-known at all. Even in SoCal, it's not known.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:DD liked Muhlenberg so much that she dropped Brandeis and BC. Nice when your kid likes a safety better than targets. Very welcoming campus. Seems like great faculty, personal attention and actively tries to help students upon graduation w/ alumni networks and school affiliations. Some nice historic buildings on campus. Gorgeous dining hall. New green science building being built. Also, voted best food in PA!
The food is so bad. We visited this summer and the visit included lunch. Made me concerned about the other PA schools if it was rated best. I know people love the school but we were not impressed (apart from food I mean).
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Claremont McKenna. Super underrated here, but top notch academics, great quality of life, internships/opportunities abound, alumni network + top outcomes.
Not a hidden gem. It’s a very elite college. You people know nothing!
It is not well-known at all. Even in SoCal, it's not known.
Just stop. It’s ranked 8th in Us News. It’s extremely selective. It’s not “hidden” in any way, shape or form.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If you polled 10 random executives and asked them which school excited them more for applicants - Claremont McKenna or University of Alabama I bet 8 would say Alabama - at least.
LOL. Maybe at a lumber company or a gun maker.
Right? Where I am from, going to college in ALABAMA opens zero magic doors 😂
It's not a state known for its higher education or for that matter, education in general.
Roll Tide.
Anonymous wrote:DD liked Muhlenberg so much that she dropped Brandeis and BC. Nice when your kid likes a safety better than targets. Very welcoming campus. Seems like great faculty, personal attention and actively tries to help students upon graduation w/ alumni networks and school affiliations. Some nice historic buildings on campus. Gorgeous dining hall. New green science building being built. Also, voted best food in PA!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Check out the UK schools! Durham, university of York, any of the Russell Group universities.
Definitely not.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:St. Mary's College of Maryland
Great campus, right on the water. It's gorgeous. Plus, it's an honors college and attracts studious types. If your kid is into sailing or rowing, it must be on their list. Cheap in-state tuition, plus a high acceptance rate (70s).
The only downside is that it's remote. It's near nothing. Like, not even a pharmacy or grocery store. The nearest pharmacy is 7-8 miles away. There is no town around the school, nor restaurants or even a bar.
I think the location is what dissuades so many from applying.
I went there. That's actually part of the draw for a lot of people I think.
If I was the next Governor of MD, I'd focus on trying to make St Mary's College tuition-free in order to lure the state's top students. It's already an honors college, but I think the location does a big disservice to its desirability. Not a lot of 18 year-olds want to go to school at a state university in the middle of rural farmland on the Chesapeake. If the school was free, I think the school would get a lot of looks from students and families.
That school should be similar in caliber and prestige to William & Mary. It's has the capability to get there.
No, William & Mary is fairly unique as one of the country's oldest schools and it's mid-sized (6500 undergrads). St. Mary's is a lot more like Mary Washington in VA--they serve an important niche--liberal arts programs for students who aren't academic superstars and don't want to spend on private school tuition.
Anonymous wrote:Check out the UK schools! Durham, university of York, any of the Russell Group universities.