Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Swarthmore has a stronger reputation - it makes a difference!
How?
Swarthmore is a well established feeder into top PhD programs. Haverford and Bryn Mawr are excellent schools, but Swarthmore is arguably the nation's top producer of PhDs across the disciplines per capita, and the intellectual rigor and academic expectations of both the students and faculty reflect that.
Bryn Mawr is also a 'well established' feeder into top PhD programs. OPs kid may be a DS so this could be irrelevant, but this PP stating that Swarthmore is somehow more academically rigorous because they churn out more Phds is a wild statement. Bryn Mawr is highly intellectual. I consider myself the outlier because I merely have a masters, but everyone else I know from Bryn Mawr has a terminal degree- MD, joint JD program, MBA, or PhD.
Not sure why you think this is a "wild" statement. I don't know of many better ways to determine with some degree of objectivity and actual evidence (rather that your personal "anec-data") that some schools are more academically rigorous than others. Swarthmore, Chicago, Reed and a handful of other SLACs have long held a reputation for being academic powerhouses in large part because their graduates end up earning a disproportionate number of PhDs.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Swarthmore has a stronger reputation - it makes a difference!
How?
Swarthmore is a well established feeder into top PhD programs. Haverford and Bryn Mawr are excellent schools, but Swarthmore is arguably the nation's top producer of PhDs across the disciplines per capita, and the intellectual rigor and academic expectations of both the students and faculty reflect that.
Bryn Mawr is also a 'well established' feeder into top PhD programs. OPs kid may be a DS so this could be irrelevant, but this PP stating that Swarthmore is somehow more academically rigorous because they churn out more Phds is a wild statement. Bryn Mawr is highly intellectual. I consider myself the outlier because I merely have a masters, but everyone else I know from Bryn Mawr has a terminal degree- MD, joint JD program, MBA, or PhD.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Swarthmore has a stronger reputation - it makes a difference!
How?
Swarthmore is a well established feeder into top PhD programs. Haverford and Bryn Mawr are excellent schools, but Swarthmore is arguably the nation's top producer of PhDs across the disciplines per capita, and the intellectual rigor and academic expectations of both the students and faculty reflect that.
Interesting - almost EVERY school we visited made these statements...even large state schools.Anonymous wrote:They do have a lot of similarities. If you’re interested in the differences, I would say size (Haverford is smaller), location (Hav has a lot more retail and restaurants in walking distance and is near a main artery and very close to Bryn Mawr and Villanova, Swarthmore is more in a in a suburb/village).
Both have Quaker roots, but Haverford was part of an orthodox branch of Quakerism while Swarthmore was part of a reform branch and was coed very early on. I’m not sure this would affect your experience today at all but it is why there are two Quaker schools in close proximity. Growing up (I’m Quaker) all the Friends we knew had gone to Swarthmore and Haverford was considered a bit “different”.
I think the tininess of Haverford could be hard if you don’t find your people. It’s very diverse racially and has a lot of first gen students and its social justice reputation is real. Last year when I toured with my kid it was the only school that started the tour with an acknowledgement of stolen land AND made us wear masks on the tour even while outside. To me it felt a bit much.
Anonymous wrote:Unlike many, we found the differences between these two schools to be pretty significant. We visited thinking that swat would be a good fit and left thinking that Haverford was way more preferable for my dc. We spent a lot of time talking with a set of current students at swat- they were super inviting and nice - about what it’s like to be a student there. I have no doubt it’s a great education but we left with the strong impression that’s it’s just too intense for my dc. Haverford, on the other hand was really appealing in terms of rigor and balance, and my dc loved the student responsibility and trust aspect of the place. We also left thinking the small size was not as much as an issue since BM is so close and connected - almost like the claremont consortium in many ways. The land acknowledgment and Covid things were just non-issues to us
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:“Last year when I toured with my kid it was the only school that started the tour with an acknowledgement of stolen land AND made us wear masks on the tour even while outside. To me it felt a bit much.“
We’re registered Dems and it’s too much for us, too. I guess it’s very generational, but I also find that the more white the organization, the more likely there are these performative declarations. Will be visiting both next week.
2 other schools that have the land acknowledgement in recent visits:
Michigan
Colorado State
All govt sponsored meetings in Australia (both parties) start with a land acknowledgement. It is totally a thing.
UVA stolen land plus slaves lived under this building. So performative. Obnoxious. Give it back then.
Anonymous wrote:“Last year when I toured with my kid it was the only school that started the tour with an acknowledgement of stolen land AND made us wear masks on the tour even while outside. To me it felt a bit much.“
We’re registered Dems and it’s too much for us, too. I guess it’s very generational, but I also find that the more white the organization, the more likely there are these performative declarations. Will be visiting both next week.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Woke and woker. Hard to tell which school hates Jews and Israel the most right now, but I think Haverford is currently in the ascendancy, given that a bunch of its Jewish students are suing the entire college for fostering an extremely anti-Semitic campus: https://www.inquirer.com/education/haverford-college-antisemitism-lawsuit-20240516.html
I don’t think a Jewish student would feel comfortable at haverford right now.
Anonymous wrote:Woke and woker. Hard to tell which school hates Jews and Israel the most right now, but I think Haverford is currently in the ascendancy, given that a bunch of its Jewish students are suing the entire college for fostering an extremely anti-Semitic campus: https://www.inquirer.com/education/haverford-college-antisemitism-lawsuit-20240516.html
Anonymous wrote:Woke and woker. Hard to tell which school hates Jews and Israel the most right now, but I think Haverford is currently in the ascendancy, given that a bunch of its Jewish students are suing the entire college for fostering an extremely anti-Semitic campus: https://www.inquirer.com/education/haverford-college-antisemitism-lawsuit-20240516.html