It's not run down, though.Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I grew up not too far from Princeton, NJ. I'm very glad that downtown Amherst is the way it is, and not ultra-fancified like Princeton. You have to shell out at least $30 to do anything there.Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It has everything that I want. And I don't see what you mean by "run down."Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What I've appreciated about the consortium is living in a real college town with bars, late night restaurants, and easy accessibility to pretty much any chain store you can think of, as opposed to being in a backwater like Williamstown.
Amherst is a poor shadow of a real college town, shockingly small and run down.
They mean it's not fancy, as if college students care about that.
Same with Harvard Square. It used to be so fun and accessible for students, but is so corporate and expensive now.
There are so many cheap shops in Harvard square that I have to think you’re just judging a book by its cover at this point.
There’s really no need for a place to look run down in order for college students to enjoy it.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I grew up not too far from Princeton, NJ. I'm very glad that downtown Amherst is the way it is, and not ultra-fancified like Princeton. You have to shell out at least $30 to do anything there.Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It has everything that I want. And I don't see what you mean by "run down."Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What I've appreciated about the consortium is living in a real college town with bars, late night restaurants, and easy accessibility to pretty much any chain store you can think of, as opposed to being in a backwater like Williamstown.
Amherst is a poor shadow of a real college town, shockingly small and run down.
They mean it's not fancy, as if college students care about that.
Same with Harvard Square. It used to be so fun and accessible for students, but is so corporate and expensive now.
Anonymous wrote:I grew up not too far from Princeton, NJ. I'm very glad that downtown Amherst is the way it is, and not ultra-fancified like Princeton. You have to shell out at least $30 to do anything there.Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It has everything that I want. And I don't see what you mean by "run down."Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What I've appreciated about the consortium is living in a real college town with bars, late night restaurants, and easy accessibility to pretty much any chain store you can think of, as opposed to being in a backwater like Williamstown.
Amherst is a poor shadow of a real college town, shockingly small and run down.
They mean it's not fancy, as if college students care about that.
I grew up not too far from Princeton, NJ. I'm very glad that downtown Amherst is the way it is, and not ultra-fancified like Princeton. You have to shell out at least $30 to do anything there.Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It has everything that I want. And I don't see what you mean by "run down."Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What I've appreciated about the consortium is living in a real college town with bars, late night restaurants, and easy accessibility to pretty much any chain store you can think of, as opposed to being in a backwater like Williamstown.
Amherst is a poor shadow of a real college town, shockingly small and run down.
They mean it's not fancy, as if college students care about that.
Anonymous wrote:It has everything that I want. And I don't see what you mean by "run down."Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What I've appreciated about the consortium is living in a real college town with bars, late night restaurants, and easy accessibility to pretty much any chain store you can think of, as opposed to being in a backwater like Williamstown.
Amherst is a poor shadow of a real college town, shockingly small and run down.
It has everything that I want. And I don't see what you mean by "run down."Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What I've appreciated about the consortium is living in a real college town with bars, late night restaurants, and easy accessibility to pretty much any chain store you can think of, as opposed to being in a backwater like Williamstown.
Amherst is a poor shadow of a real college town, shockingly small and run down.
Anonymous wrote:Shame that there seems to be a lack of vision among the individual consortium presidents. They really should seek to collaborate and make cross-consortium opportunities more vibrant and accessible. From co-teaching to special shared clubs to programming, the possibilities are endless.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My kids loved the school - the open curriculum, beautiful campus, the culture and the professors they met. The consortium wasn’t even given a second thought
+1 There is a reason the editorial mentions other students taking classes at Amherst not the reverse. My kid is beyond happy and academically fulfilled there. She'll do junior year at Oxford to expand her horizons a bit.
Anonymous wrote:My kids loved the school - the open curriculum, beautiful campus, the culture and the professors they met. The consortium wasn’t even given a second thought
Anonymous wrote:I'm not surprised OP and PP. I think the Quaker consortium with Haverford, Bryn Mawr, Swat and Penn is totally overhyped, and knowing the terrain around Amherst, I'm sure the same is true there as well. It's nice to have but with a few exceptions (shared departments between Haverford & BM) it's a logistical hassle. A really motivated kid will take occasional advantage of the option, but it's largely marketing.
Anonymous wrote:There’s little serious reason to choose Amherst over its peers. It’s a depressing school with an emphasis on the humanities (no job for you unless you wanna obsess over law school or consulting applications!), the campus is nearly entirely rundown(Keefe, Frost library, Fayerweather, Cohan, the Octagon) or a building is excessively cramped (the church hosting multiple academic departments, the science center is stuffed to the max and classrooms are starting to operate outside it, because there’s simply not enough space for all the departments, various humanities departments in tiny homes bursting with faculty).
If you want to attend, by all means do, but we found Amherst did nothing to improve itself.