Anonymous wrote:Deep springs
Iykyk
Anonymous wrote:Deep Springs: Sen Andy Kim went there….. it’s on everybody’s radar these days
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Deep springs
Iykyk
I don't think this one is underrated - just under the radar. The people who know. Know.
Deep Springs is interesting but calling it a college in the traditional sense is a stretch. The learning model of classical education is an affront to all of the CS loving HYPSM dweebs inhabiting DCUM.
I find the deep spring love selective and very strange. Most people on DCUM will make fun of any kid pursuing non-stem liberal arts degrees. Now they think the liberal arts are a fundamental study when there’s a college in the middle of nowhere (classically all-men) that has a pretty nonexistent reputation?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Deep springs
Iykyk
I don't think this one is underrated - just under the radar. The people who know. Know.
Deep Springs is interesting but calling it a college in the traditional sense is a stretch. The learning model of classical education is an affront to all of the CS loving HYPSM dweebs inhabiting DCUM.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Deep springs
Iykyk
I don't think this one is underrated - just under the radar. The people who know. Know.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:SMU
Hahahahahaha…… #91 is about right
Anonymous wrote:Deep springs
Iykyk
Anonymous wrote:Is Sewanee super southern in terms of culture? And how about school spirit?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Good to know re: Sewanee. How would you compare it to Furman?
Tied in the rankings and similar in reputation, but the Sewanee grads I've run across have been more impressive.
(Source: a decade in Atlanta)
Anonymous wrote:If you liked Sewanee, I would check out Rhodes College. Also look at Whitman and St Olaf. Lesser known colleges with extremely high education quality.