Anonymous wrote:How do you distinguish between the LACs when they're all similar, especially amongst WASP schools? They all have small class sizes, pretty campuses, and strong academics. DD is interested in a math/history double major, but the schools and offerings are so so similar that it seems like we are just splitting hairs deciding.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It “a” LAC, not “an” LAC.
I've always pronounced it "Lack" in my head, ie, treated it as an acronym, not an initialism like ATM.
Exactly. No one says their kid goes to an "el ay cee".
Actually, many do.
+1
Anonymous wrote:How do you distinguish between the LACs when they're all similar, especially amongst WASP schools? They all have small class sizes, pretty campuses, and strong academics. DD is interested in a math/history double major, but the schools and offerings are so so similar that it seems like we are just splitting hairs deciding.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It “a” LAC, not “an” LAC.
I've always pronounced it "Lack" in my head, ie, treated it as an acronym, not an initialism like ATM.
Exactly. No one says their kid goes to an "el ay cee".
Actually, many do.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It “a” LAC, not “an” LAC.
I've always pronounced it "Lack" in my head, ie, treated it as an acronym, not an initialism like ATM.
Exactly. No one says their kid goes to an "el ay cee".
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It “a” LAC, not “an” LAC.
I've always pronounced it "Lack" in my head, ie, treated it as an acronym, not an initialism like ATM.
Anonymous wrote:It “a” LAC, not “an” LAC.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You can use IPEDS to view colleges by their number of majors in a field. For example, Swarthmore graduated five "first majors" in history in a recent year:
https://nces.ed.gov/collegenavigator/?q=Swarthmore&s=all&id=216287#programs
I would go deep on the faculty - who they are, how long-term they are, their research interests, etc.
I'm a flagship grad, as is my husband, but we both went to smaller grad programs.
It's a problem when you have to take classes from a department chair or a small set of faculty that you don't vibe with. At a big school, you have lots of alternatives. At a small school, it seems like high school 2.0 with only one person who teaches some particular thing. And to get great scholarships to grad school, you absolutely need a few faculty members to write glowing letters. So to me, alignment with the departmental faculty would be key. If you can't understand or relate to their research areas, that's going to likely make their special classes kind of boring...senior seminars, fun electives, etc.
Anonymous wrote:You can use IPEDS to view colleges by their number of majors in a field. For example, Swarthmore graduated five "first majors" in history in a recent year:
https://nces.ed.gov/collegenavigator/?q=Swarthmore&s=all&id=216287#programs
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You can use IPEDS to view colleges by their number of majors in a field. For example, Swarthmore graduated five "first majors" in history in a recent year:
https://nces.ed.gov/collegenavigator/?q=Swarthmore&s=all&id=216287#programs
I would go deep on the faculty - who they are, how long-term they are, their research interests, etc.
I'm a flagship grad, as is my husband, but we both went to smaller grad programs.
It's a problem when you have to take classes from a department chair or a small set of faculty that you don't vibe with. At a big school, you have lots of alternatives. At a small school, it seems like high school 2.0 with only one person who teaches some particular thing. And to get great scholarships to grad school, you absolutely need a few faculty members to write glowing letters. So to me, alignment with the departmental faculty would be key. If you can't understand or relate to their research areas, that's going to likely make their special classes kind of boring...senior seminars, fun electives, etc.
Anonymous wrote:You can use IPEDS to view colleges by their number of majors in a field. For example, Swarthmore graduated five "first majors" in history in a recent year:
https://nces.ed.gov/collegenavigator/?q=Swarthmore&s=all&id=216287#programs