Anonymous wrote:Richmond. It has a small graduate school.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What’s her reason for wanting some grad students around, but not too many?
Yeah what does this mean? Grad students don’t have that much interaction with undergraduates, nor do they desire to do so. Does she just like having older students around?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What’s her reason for wanting some grad students around, but not too many?
Yeah what does this mean? Grad students don’t have that much interaction with undergraduates, nor do they desire to do so. Does she just like having older students around?
Anonymous wrote:What’s her reason for wanting some grad students around, but not too many?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Case Western, Emory, Rice, Tufts and Wash. U. all meet those conditions.
All the ones in bold do meet both requirements.
But WashU does not. It's not majority undergraduate, although it's mid-size.
Anonymous wrote:You can add Yale
Anonymous wrote:Case Western, Emory, Rice, Tufts and Wash. U. all meet those conditions.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Northwestern
William and Mary
False. NU has 8-9k undergrads and 14k+ graduate students.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My DD ideally wants to attend a medium-size college (5,000-10,000) undergrad students) and one that is not majority grad students. Which of the popular so-called "top 50" colleges are BOTH mid-size and undergrad majority (or at least 50/50 undergrad/grad)?
She doesn't want to attend a very small school or one that is only undergrads, so LACs are out.
The ones that the mix of majority undergrad (or at least 50/50) and 5K-10K undergrads are:
"Ivy plus": Princeton, Brown, Dartmouth, Penn
"New Ivies": Vanderbilt, Case Western, Notre Dame, Tufts, Rice
Other: BC, Lehigh, Villanova
Any others we're missing? She's looking at top 50-ish for her reach/targets.
Interesting to see the same usuals rush to write the college they are boosting for without reading the damn question. Example: northwestern.