Anonymous wrote:I can offer only my own experience. I was a history dept at a SLAC. The courses offered (as pointed out above) were indeed just the faculty's own personal interests. I did not receive any overarching history courses. So my knowledge is spotty. My DD was a history major at UVA and received a FAR better history education than I did. Far better. I read the syllabi at the beginning of the terms just out of interest. i guess all i can say is do your research. I was, however, a top student and that major got me into law school
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Small highly ranked universities
Yes. Where professors teach everything
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:He will have to compete with all the students masquerading as History majors who will immediately switch to CS or engineering the moment they get accepted. Our school has quite a few of them. You can immediately spot them because they apply for their "true" major to the state schools where you cannot switch easily.
Hmm. OP here. Kid attends a private and has taken (or will take) all history electives including an honors history research/seminar class as as senior. His classes and extracurriculars do not support a stealth switch to a STEM major.
I am not debating your kid's interest. Just saying that unfortunately history has become a prime stealth major for applicants. Esp. private school kids who often have access to expensive college counselors who 'position' them to masquerade as history majors.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:He will have to compete with all the students masquerading as History majors who will immediately switch to CS or engineering the moment they get accepted. Our school has quite a few of them. You can immediately spot them because they apply for their "true" major to the state schools where you cannot switch easily.
The above is incorrect.
+1 many schools are now only offering CS at application
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:He will have to compete with all the students masquerading as History majors who will immediately switch to CS or engineering the moment they get accepted. Our school has quite a few of them. You can immediately spot them because they apply for their "true" major to the state schools where you cannot switch easily.
Hmm. OP here. Kid attends a private and has taken (or will take) all history electives including an honors history research/seminar class as as senior. His classes and extracurriculars do not support a stealth switch to a STEM major.
Anonymous wrote:Small highly ranked universities
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:He will have to compete with all the students masquerading as History majors who will immediately switch to CS or engineering the moment they get accepted. Our school has quite a few of them. You can immediately spot them because they apply for their "true" major to the state schools where you cannot switch easily.
The above is incorrect.
Anonymous wrote:As an off the beaten path option, maybe he would be interested in St. John's College?
https://www.sjc.edu/academic-programs/undergraduate