Anonymous wrote:Holy Cross is a more social and certainly athletic school than any NESCAC school. HC beat Georgetown at Fenway Park this weekend with 15,000 fans in attendance. Much higher profile and school spirit at Holy Cross.
Anonymous wrote:Conn College would not be a match and the school has weak academics. An admission yield below 20% says it all.
Anonymous wrote:Tufts is similar in some ways to Case, Wash U, and seems like a more open, diverse environment than Williams or Middlebury.
Anonymous wrote:Conn College would not be a match and the school has weak academics. An admission yield below 20% says it all.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Midwesterner here, curious which NESCAC schools offer the best vibe/fit for a student from a flyover state. We are looking for campuses that feel warm, welcoming, and collaborative rather than pretentious or dominated by private/boarding-school culture.
My daughter is pretty open academically, plays a varsity sport, and works as a stage manager for drama productions, so she’s well-rounded and tends to make friends easily.
Which NESCAC schools would likely be the best match for that environment, and which might be tougher fits?
The NESCAC school that you are seeking does not exist. You are not going to find Midwestern nice or Southern kindness at a NESCAC school. To be blunt, you are more likely to find the opposite of what you are seeking. NESCAC schools are lax bros, prep school central types.
Regardless, I admire your daughter's desire to explore outside of her geographic region.
NESCAC schools offer beautiful Fall settings and solid academics.
As others have suggested, Davidson College may be a match. Bowdoin College is worth a visit, but it is small, however the campus vibe is more like an exclusive New England prep school than the elite college that it is. If the search is limited to NESCAC schools, then consider Conn College.
This is quite simply not true. Connecticut College is exactly what the OP has described. Her daughter will find what she described there. I know. My kid went there.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Midwesterner here, curious which NESCAC schools offer the best vibe/fit for a student from a flyover state. We are looking for campuses that feel warm, welcoming, and collaborative rather than pretentious or dominated by private/boarding-school culture.
My daughter is pretty open academically, plays a varsity sport, and works as a stage manager for drama productions, so she’s well-rounded and tends to make friends easily.
Which NESCAC schools would likely be the best match for that environment, and which might be tougher fits?
The NESCAC school that you are seeking does not exist. You are not going to find Midwestern nice or Southern kindness at a NESCAC school. To be blunt, you are more likely to find the opposite of what you are seeking. NESCAC schools are lax bros, prep school central types.
Regardless, I admire your daughter's desire to explore outside of her geographic region.
NESCAC schools offer beautiful Fall settings and solid academics.
As others have suggested, Davidson College may be a match. Bowdoin College is worth a visit, but it is small, however the campus vibe is more like an exclusive New England prep school than the elite college that it is. If the search is limited to NESCAC schools, then consider Conn College.
Anonymous wrote:Avoid williams, lord the egos would make your kid explode.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Colby or Holy Cross might be good options. Probably more so because most NESCAC schools are magnets for Northeast prep school grads. Colby may be exception.
Being a lesser NESCAC Colby does have a lower population of kids from top privates relative to Amherst, Bowdoin, Middlebury, and Williams.
You do realize that Colby is the hardest admit of the bunch?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Colby or Holy Cross might be good options. Probably more so because most NESCAC schools are magnets for Northeast prep school grads. Colby may be exception.
Being a lesser NESCAC Colby does have a lower population of kids from top privates relative to Amherst, Bowdoin, Middlebury, and Williams.
You do realize that Colby is the hardest admit of the bunch?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Colby or Holy Cross might be good options. Probably more so because most NESCAC schools are magnets for Northeast prep school grads. Colby may be exception.
Being a lesser NESCAC Colby does have a lower population of kids from top privates relative to Amherst, Bowdoin, Middlebury, and Williams.
You do realize that Colby is the hardest admit of the bunch?