Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Girl? If so, try Smith. Mine matches that description to a T and is loving Smith.
Also Mount Holyoke. My DD, a rising senior, sounds similar and has a lot of schools from the PPs list on her list but her favorite right now is Mt H.
Anonymous wrote:Definitely Carnegie Mellon. There is a significant percentage of students on the autism spectrum (yes, I know your child is not on the spectrum), and CMU does a great job of accommodating them. There is a great deal of tolerance for social awkwardness, and students tend to be accepting of other people's differences. Definitely challenging academically.
Anonymous wrote:I went to swarthmore - he would be very supported socially there!
Anonymous wrote:Also, I toured Dickinson recently and while I really liked it, I actually didn't think it seemed particularly good for a socially awkward kid.
Anonymous wrote:Juniata is an overhyped CTCL joke. Do better.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Read Colleges That Change Lives.
I think a kid like this should check out Juniata (it is a sweet, non-judgemental community where students develop close relationships with faculty). The school akso tries to impart sound values, along with education.
Juniata is second rate for a really smart and high stats kid. Be serious. Stop being a CTCL marketer.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Not OP but any big, really big, schools that would be on the list outside of UVA (already mentioned)?
Any of them. I think the point is that big schools have a range of kids and kids of all interests and personalities.
+1
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Not OP but any big, really big, schools that would be on the list outside of UVA (already mentioned)?
Any of them. I think the point is that big schools have a range of kids and kids of all interests and personalities.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My rising jr sounds similar. Schools on the list to look at:
W&M
Mary Washington
Dickinson
Swarthmore
Haverford
College of Wooster
Kenyon
Case Western
Rochester
Carleton
Macalester
Carnegie Mellon
Clark
This is a solid list, but it's criminal not to include Grinnell on it. Grinnell is as good as all and better than most of the schools on the list, is full of students who are exactly as OP described, and is one of the few highly selective colleges that actually is generous with merit aid.