Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I would go with Williams. In a lot of circles, particularly within a lot of traditional industries like law, medicine, and finance, Williams is still seen as a solid tier above Vanderbilt. Vandy strikes me as a school that is somewhat overrated for what its selectivity with a very insecure Chancellor who seems to be obsessed with rankings.
Lol “solid tier above” in law and especially medicine
Williams doesn't have a medical school or a law school, but I think what this person meant was that within the legal and medical professions, a Williams undergrad is typically seen as more prestigious than Vanderbilt. Williams is known to be a pretty strong feeder into Top 14 law schools, while Vanderbilt lags behind: https://www.collegetransitions.com/dataverse/top-feeders-law-school
Maybe. But I think this view is a little dated. Vanderbilt has an excellent medical school right on campus. And it has a T14 law school.
If someone wants the SLAC experience, go to Williams. But I really don't think Williams is better than Vanderbilt for med and law school placement these days.
+1, people here are obsessed with lacs. If you at all like opportunities and diversity, I’d stay clear. It’s nice in theory, but having access to actual professionals nearby is really helpful and can change your career for the positive. I think lac people get too caught up in the academic path to actually explore anything- doesn’t help their campuses are stuck in the middle of absolutely nowhere. For some reason, liberal arts colleges are allergic to engaging with the rest of the world
Anonymous wrote:Williams.
More respected among those that hire and admit to top med/law/phD
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I would go with Williams. In a lot of circles, particularly within a lot of traditional industries like law, medicine, and finance, Williams is still seen as a solid tier above Vanderbilt. Vandy strikes me as a school that is somewhat overrated for what its selectivity with a very insecure Chancellor who seems to be obsessed with rankings.
Lol “solid tier above” in law and especially medicine
Williams doesn't have a medical school or a law school, but I think what this person meant was that within the legal and medical professions, a Williams undergrad is typically seen as more prestigious than Vanderbilt. Williams is known to be a pretty strong feeder into Top 14 law schools, while Vanderbilt lags behind: https://www.collegetransitions.com/dataverse/top-feeders-law-school
Maybe. But I think this view is a little dated. Vanderbilt has an excellent medical school right on campus. And it has a T14 law school.
If someone wants the SLAC experience, go to Williams. But I really don't think Williams is better than Vanderbilt for med and law school placement these days.
Anonymous wrote:I would go with Williams. In a lot of circles, particularly within a lot of traditional industries like law, medicine, and finance, Williams is still seen as a solid tier above Vanderbilt. Vandy strikes me as a school that is somewhat overrated for what its selectivity with a very insecure Chancellor who seems to be obsessed with rankings.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Boys love Williams and do well there.
Vanderbilt has frats -- not what I'd choose but perhaps your kid disagrees.
But I think it's very unusual for students to apply to both Vanderbilt and Williams.
It's not at all unusual. Williams, Amherst, Swarthmore are super prestigious, many consider them HYP level undergrad education. Given the crapshoot that is admissions, the decision tree is not figuring out type of institute you'd like and applying only there, it is instead applying to the best institutions you have a shot at and figuring out later whether you want small/large, city/rural based on the admits you get and their rankings.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Boys love Williams and do well there.
Vanderbilt has frats -- not what I'd choose but perhaps your kid disagrees.
But I think it's very unusual for students to apply to both Vanderbilt and Williams.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I would go with Williams. In a lot of circles, particularly within a lot of traditional industries like law, medicine, and finance, Williams is still seen as a solid tier above Vanderbilt. Vandy strikes me as a school that is somewhat overrated for what its selectivity with a very insecure Chancellor who seems to be obsessed with rankings.
Lol “solid tier above” in law and especially medicine
Williams doesn't have a medical school or a law school, but I think what this person meant was that within the legal and medical professions, a Williams undergrad is typically seen as more prestigious than Vanderbilt. Williams is known to be a pretty strong feeder into Top 14 law schools, while Vanderbilt lags behind: https://www.collegetransitions.com/dataverse/top-feeders-law-school