Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My DD wants school that skews male. You also have to look at str8/gay ratio to see your dating options.
They are all STEM schools...RIT, RPI, etc. that are like 75% male and 25% female.
OP here. We've been touring these types of schools as my daughter wants to study engineering. There are a lot of men but frankly, not men that most girls want to date. We were at Georgia Tech this weekend and my daughter (who honestly is not picky about boys) probabably saw a dozen boys that she found attractive. The rest appeared super, super geeky and odd. I'm married to a geek (so I appreciate geeks) but this was next level.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My DD wants school that skews male. You also have to look at str8/gay ratio to see your dating options.
They are all STEM schools...RIT, RPI, etc. that are like 75% male and 25% female.
Anonymous wrote:I’m perplexed by this and think it stinks, especially for girls. Was at a tour at UVM earlier this year and learned it is about 65% female. Our guide said it wasn’t too noticeable in her STEM classes, but otherwise you can feel the imbalance.
In addition to how this negatively impacts the dating scene for women, I hate how girls are at a real disadvantage in the admissions process.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I’m perplexed by this and think it stinks, especially for girls. Was at a tour at UVM earlier this year and learned it is about 65% female. Our guide said it wasn’t too noticeable in her STEM classes, but otherwise you can feel the imbalance.
In addition to how this negatively impacts the dating scene for women, I hate how girls are at a real disadvantage in the admissions process.
Went to 65% female school (and high lesbianism). The women figured out that we were all smart and managed to keep high standards. So, don't settle or fight over the boys. The boys were dicks.
Anonymous wrote:I’m perplexed by this and think it stinks, especially for girls. Was at a tour at UVM earlier this year and learned it is about 65% female. Our guide said it wasn’t too noticeable in her STEM classes, but otherwise you can feel the imbalance.
In addition to how this negatively impacts the dating scene for women, I hate how girls are at a real disadvantage in the admissions process.
Anonymous wrote:men who went to college before were middle class, now men who go to college think they are "it", much harder for women to find quality men
Anonymous wrote:Years ago when the imbalance was the other way, there was a lot of focus on getting more women to study at university, and rightfully so.
Now that it's majority female -- a 3:2 female:male ratio at most universities -- where is the push to get more men to study?
Anonymous wrote:My DD is at UVA which is not severely unbalanced but it is and it is very hard to find guys who are interested in dating. Meanwhile my DS had no trouble finding girls to date there.