Anonymous wrote:Very distinctive place. It's so far left now that it's not as hard to get into as it used to be, but at the same time the academics are supposed to be quite intense and it sends an obscene number of graduates to graduate school. I'd say it's a great place for someone who knows as a high school senior that he or she would like to be a college professor some day, but not a great bang-for-the-buck place for other students.
Anonymous wrote:Reed seems like an ideal LAC and a gem in American education.
You get both depth and breadth. American liberal arts majors generally don't get a lot of depth in their subjects (since they're doing so much general liberal arts education), while in other nations where students do single-subject education you have more narrow-minded specialists with more depth knowledge of their subjects (i.e. "reading" say, history at Oxford or Cambridge, you're not taking physics for poets classes).
Reed gets both right. The students get an intense liberal arts education, but also intense knowledge of the discipline.
Anonymous wrote:We looked at it and it was too far left for my kid. Who ended up at Oberlin and loves it there. That says something. You can decide what.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Steve Jobs is an alum
Not an alum. Took some classes there and dropped out.
Anonymous wrote:We looked at it and it was too far left for my kid. Who ended up at Oberlin and loves it there. That says something. You can decide what.
Anonymous wrote:Friend's daughter with terrific academic credentials chose Reed over better schools because of it's uber progressive reputation. She was very disenchanted and didn't even finish the first year. Drugs were out of control.
Anonymous wrote:Steve Jobs is an alum
Anonymous wrote:Hippy school in the Pacific Northwest. Knew kids who transfered there in college. Have never met a Reed graduate in DC.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I'm a Reed grad as well. While I agree with everything the other Reedie said, I want to point out that Reed is a Great School for the Right Student. I wasn't the right student, and college felt like the longest, darkest haul of my life.
Reed provides a great environment and rich network for many students, but it can also be disorienting and alienating for other students. I sincerely believe that Reed's academic education is superior to nearly anything else available, and it might be an ideal school for someone who with a strong sense of self who wants a classical education or to go on in academia. However, it's also intense and quirky in ways that absolutely wore me down, and I personally wish I had had the self awareness to transfer elsewhere after a couple of years rather than feel compelled to push through to graduation. I know that Reed is working to improve its support for students, so maybe it's a better environment now - I sure hope so!
Please tell me you made this up and that this is not a thing like "Schools that Change lives"? What a racket. And, yes, I went to some of their 25 colleges in a room presentations.
Anonymous wrote:Very distinctive place. It's so far left now that it's not as hard to get into as it used to be, but at the same time the academics are supposed to be quite intense and it sends an obscene number of graduates to graduate school. I'd say it's a great place for someone who knows as a high school senior that he or she would like to be a college professor some day, but not a great bang-for-the-buck place for other students.
Anonymous wrote:I'm a Reed grad as well. While I agree with everything the other Reedie said, I want to point out that Reed is a Great School for the Right Student. I wasn't the right student, and college felt like the longest, darkest haul of my life.
Reed provides a great environment and rich network for many students, but it can also be disorienting and alienating for other students. I sincerely believe that Reed's academic education is superior to nearly anything else available, and it might be an ideal school for someone who with a strong sense of self who wants a classical education or to go on in academia. However, it's also intense and quirky in ways that absolutely wore me down, and I personally wish I had had the self awareness to transfer elsewhere after a couple of years rather than feel compelled to push through to graduation. I know that Reed is working to improve its support for students, so maybe it's a better environment now - I sure hope so!
Anonymous wrote:The most famous person to have attended Reed was Steve Jobs who dropped out after a few weeks and then spent the next 18 months hanging around campus, doing drugs and dropping in on classes. That's Reed in a nutshell.