Anonymous wrote:It amazes me how well Williams has been able to market WEPO. Many other colleges have similar programs: Pomona with Cambridge, Amherst with New College, Oxford, and yet it only seems to come up when discussing Williams.
There's also tons of other study abroad opportunities available at both schools, many of which your child may find more alluring than Oxford. The reputation among DC's friends is that Oxbridge is the only study abroad program that is actually academically rigorous. That took it off his list.
It's perfectly reasonable to choose Williams; just not because of WEPO.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If the student is not a college athlete, then Pomona is the easy answer.
Op here. DC is not a student athlete. Is the divide at Williams that serious?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Surprised no one is defending Williams. Its student body is incredibly warm and they have the cutest mascot/merch. The math department is highly rated, and Williams has very good outcomes on the level of ivies. Id be worried DC wouldn’t be able to get a job on the east coast if they went to Pomona
The mascot is really horid
Anonymous wrote:Surprised no one is defending Williams. Its student body is incredibly warm and they have the cutest mascot/merch. The math department is highly rated, and Williams has very good outcomes on the level of ivies. Id be worried DC wouldn’t be able to get a job on the east coast if they went to Pomona
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Eph ‘03 here. Remember that reality happens and you might be too stressed/overworked to even take up a tutorial- they’ve improved, but before only 30ish% of students took up tutorial. It also can be extremely taxing not having anywhere to go. Williams is very isolated and as a woman of color growing into herself, I do think it was a bit of a detriment to be so far away from anything of interest.
The math department is very strong. One of Williams’ golden Children up there with Econ. I was an art history major which…had some support, not as much as those majors for sure. Seeing where my class went, if DC wants to be a researcher, head over to Pomona. Most of the math majors in my class ran straight to finance.
Forgot to mention that WEPO is great but overrated. Like half of the admitted students come because of WEPO, but there’s many other programs to study at Oxford if you want, and it’s a competitive application. Id focus more on the college that you are attending
Anonymous wrote:Eph ‘03 here. Remember that reality happens and you might be too stressed/overworked to even take up a tutorial- they’ve improved, but before only 30ish% of students took up tutorial. It also can be extremely taxing not having anywhere to go. Williams is very isolated and as a woman of color growing into herself, I do think it was a bit of a detriment to be so far away from anything of interest.
The math department is very strong. One of Williams’ golden Children up there with Econ. I was an art history major which…had some support, not as much as those majors for sure. Seeing where my class went, if DC wants to be a researcher, head over to Pomona. Most of the math majors in my class ran straight to finance.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Surprised no one is defending Williams. Its student body is incredibly warm and they have the cutest mascot/merch. The math department is highly rated, and Williams has very good outcomes on the level of ivies. Id be worried DC wouldn’t be able to get a job on the east coast if they went to Pomona
+1
I did math and Econ at Williams and loved it. The professors are amazingly accessible. It was a bit of a culture shock going from being kind of the math wiz at my dc private and then being surrounded by math lovers who were on a whole different level, but the students and professors could not have been more welcoming and helpful. I didn’t find them cold at all. I ended up focusing on math and Econ (and fitting the stereotype of going into banking), but I loved that lots of the math people were equally focused on second majors that had nothing to do with math and were able to do so just fine.
I had always lived in DC so was worried it spoke feel too isolated. I ended up being so busy that I appreciated the focus on the campus and college. I don’t know what the PP was talking about as far as not classes at a certain time because of sports? It’s a regular school day and classes end in the afternoon. There aren’t evening classes but that’s not bc of sports. Look at the focus of the school and quotes from early presidents. They want you to be well rounded and explore the environment, too. I played a sport only my freshman year, and I wouldn’t say the sports teams are cliquey. The sports teams end up spending a lot of time together in season, so in that sense they are, but I don’t know how that’s different than at any other school none difference unique to smaller schools might be that there are a lot of multi sport athletes, which wouldn’t be possible at a div 1 school.
I would definitely recommend the math dept there. I’d reach out to some professors or other current students from your high school and start there.
Anonymous wrote:Surprised no one is defending Williams. Its student body is incredibly warm and they have the cutest mascot/merch. The math department is highly rated, and Williams has very good outcomes on the level of ivies. Id be worried DC wouldn’t be able to get a job on the east coast if they went to Pomona
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:^^Williams and Amherst are notorious for the above divide. It gets more diluted at Pomona and 5C’s because the athletes are spread out among the 5 colleges. Also, Pomona way more diverse of the SLAC’s-most student athletes at Williams and Amherst white UMC type students (like 55% or so at Williams).
What about Pomona attracts diverse students do you think? These are all highly competitive colleges for admissions, so seems weird that Pomona would differ
Anonymous wrote:^^Williams and Amherst are notorious for the above divide. It gets more diluted at Pomona and 5C’s because the athletes are spread out among the 5 colleges. Also, Pomona way more diverse of the SLAC’s-most student athletes at Williams and Amherst white UMC type students (like 55% or so at Williams).