Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Not sure why but kids at SLACS seem much more likely to take a semester abroad than students at big state schools, if that is of interest. Was an incredible experience for my son and many of his high school friends from other SLACS were scattered across Europe first semester of Junior year, even those who played D3 spring sports.
Blah blah blah. You can study abroad from any school. Easily. One of my kids did it from a SLAC. Two others did it from State U. I did it from a Catholic U way back in the day.
My hunch is that a higher proportion of SLAC kids study abroad only because they feel like they’re suffocating in their small environments and feel the need to get away.
NP. I find your bizarre hatred of SLACs so fascinating. You haunt these boards, often posting immediately when the word SLAC is mentioned, and have a pretty distinctive and identifiable writing style. What happened to you that has made you so obsessed? Did your child have a bad experience?
I went to HYS/big state schools and my kids look like they’re headed to the same, so it’s not personal. I’m just kind of fascinated by how someone becomes so crazy about one style of school.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Not sure why but kids at SLACS seem much more likely to take a semester abroad than students at big state schools, if that is of interest. Was an incredible experience for my son and many of his high school friends from other SLACS were scattered across Europe first semester of Junior year, even those who played D3 spring sports.
Blah blah blah. You can study abroad from any school. Easily. One of my kids did it from a SLAC. Two others did it from State U. I did it from a Catholic U way back in the day.
My hunch is that a higher proportion of SLAC kids study abroad only because they feel like they’re suffocating in their small environments and feel the need to get away.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Not sure why but kids at SLACS seem much more likely to take a semester abroad than students at big state schools, if that is of interest. Was an incredible experience for my son and many of his high school friends from other SLACS were scattered across Europe first semester of Junior year, even those who played D3 spring sports.
Blah blah blah. You can study abroad from any school. Easily. One of my kids did it from a SLAC. Two others did it from State U. I did it from a Catholic U way back in the day.
My hunch is that a higher proportion of SLAC kids study abroad only because they feel like they’re suffocating in their small environments and feel the need to get away.
Actually, it’s a requirement at several SLACS and the kids love the experience. SLACS aren’t for everyone but they’re great experiences for some kids. I truly don’t understand why this bashing comes up time and time again. Some kids thrive in large state universities and there are great companies that recruit at them. Yes, there are also study abroad opportunities. No one denies any of these things about large universities. Other kids enjoy the small school experience and still find good jobs and end up in ranked graduate programs. College is not one size fits all and there are plenty of options out there.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Not sure why but kids at SLACS seem much more likely to take a semester abroad than students at big state schools, if that is of interest. Was an incredible experience for my son and many of his high school friends from other SLACS were scattered across Europe first semester of Junior year, even those who played D3 spring sports.
Blah blah blah. You can study abroad from any school. Easily. One of my kids did it from a SLAC. Two others did it from State U. I did it from a Catholic U way back in the day.
My hunch is that a higher proportion of SLAC kids study abroad only because they feel like they’re suffocating in their small environments and feel the need to get away.
Anonymous wrote:But the point is that to most people if you throw out the name Davidson or one of the “silly” CTCL schools they won’t know the difference.
Anonymous wrote:Not sure why but kids at SLACS seem much more likely to take a semester abroad than students at big state schools, if that is of interest. Was an incredible experience for my son and many of his high school friends from other SLACS were scattered across Europe first semester of Junior year, even those who played D3 spring sports.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:But the point is that to most people if you throw out the name Davidson or one of the “silly” CTCL schools they won’t know the difference.
The employers who previous posters said are “prestigious” sure would. They get it.
I went to Penn and a lot of people assumed it was Penn State and people in general were/are confused even I would say Univ of Pennsylvania in Philly. Obviously employers and other people know the school. I do t think you go by whether they public at large knows the name. You go by where your kid would do best/be happiest and how the school will help their career.
Conversely, my son (a student at Penn State) has impressed my relatives from the Midwest that he got into an Ivy League school.![]()
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:But the point is that to most people if you throw out the name Davidson or one of the “silly” CTCL schools they won’t know the difference.
The employers who previous posters said are “prestigious” sure would. They get it.
I went to Penn and a lot of people assumed it was Penn State and people in general were/are confused even I would say Univ of Pennsylvania in Philly. Obviously employers and other people know the school. I do t think you go by whether they public at large knows the name. You go by where your kid would do best/be happiest and how the school will help their career.
Anonymous wrote:The kind of employer who knows Davidson is the kind of employer that DD should pursue. Undoubtedly, it'll be more prestigious and the people that she'll be working with will be running around in more elite circles than those who have only heard of schools like Penn State. Harsh, but true.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:But the point is that to most people if you throw out the name Davidson or one of the “silly” CTCL schools they won’t know the difference.
The employers who previous posters said are “prestigious” sure would. They get it.
I went to Penn and a lot of people assumed it was Penn State and people in general were/are confused even I would say Univ of Pennsylvania in Philly. Obviously employers and other people know the school. I do t think you go by whether they public at large knows the name. You go by where your kid would do best/be happiest and how the school will help their career.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:But the point is that to most people if you throw out the name Davidson or one of the “silly” CTCL schools they won’t know the difference.
The employers who previous posters said are “prestigious” sure would. They get it.
Anonymous wrote:
I think you overestimate the average university knowledge of the median Google manager. I worked at Facebook until last year, we were mostly nerds really into tech but likely not super knowledgeable about colleges outside of big names. I’m a fan of Steph Curry, so know the name but also didn’t realize it was a top school until the college search process began for my kids. Maybe I’m not sophisticated either, but most Facebook tech people are not, maybe the finance group is?