Anonymous wrote:With 2025 US News ranking of 19, MIDD is comparable to Colgate and Richmond. It is not in the same neighborhood of Amherst, Williams and Bowdoin. Colby at 25 is more of a peer. Endowment wise it’s endowment is respectable but pales in comparison to Amherst, Bowdoin, Williams, Wellesley, Smith, Richmond.
Karen is cooking!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The most troubling thing of all is if the college actually uses this terminology: "the class of 2029 and 2029.5"
2029.5 -- tell me this is a joke.
Feb program has been a thing at Midd forever. They ski down a mountain at their graduation. It’s a whole thing.
Anonymous wrote:Let’s not confuse things w facts. We have one enthusiastic Midd hater here. Let her cook!
Anonymous wrote:Application numbers are down at a lot of colleges. This isn’t just a Midd thing.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Majoring in Russian or Political Science in the middle of nowhere for $100k a year is less appealing to GenZ and their families than it used to be.
Also skiing in Vermont had declined in quality due to rising temps. Kids who really love to ski now go to school in Colorado.
As someone who legitimately studied Russian at Middlebury many years ago, this was kind of my first thought. If the school's strength is in teaching foreign languages and that's one of those areas where AI can now do all the translating, etc. then it doesn't make economic sense to spend four years learning this skill -- and I am saying this with great sadness as someone who loves Russian poetry and literature, etc. If I were a professor of a foreign language, I'm be concerned that my job would soon be going away.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Majoring in Russian or Political Science in the middle of nowhere for $100k a year is less appealing to GenZ and their families than it used to be.
Also skiing in Vermont had declined in quality due to rising temps. Kids who really love to ski now go to school in Colorado.
As someone who legitimately studied Russian at Middlebury many years ago, this was kind of my first thought. If the school's strength is in teaching foreign languages and that's one of those areas where AI can now do all the translating, etc. then it doesn't make economic sense to spend four years learning this skill -- and I am saying this with great sadness as someone who loves Russian poetry and literature, etc. If I were a professor of a foreign language, I'm be concerned that my job would soon be going away.
Anonymous wrote:Majoring in Russian or Political Science in the middle of nowhere for $100k a year is less appealing to GenZ and their families than it used to be.
Also skiing in Vermont had declined in quality due to rising temps. Kids who really love to ski now go to school in Colorado.