Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Beloit has the most creative and liberal students of this group; Macalester the most political and internationally-minded; Carleton the most traditional, academic high achievers. Beloit tends to admit students with unrealized potential and its admission rate is higher than Mac's or Carleton's, but it does wonders with its students. All three schools produce students who go on to become intellectual leaders and high-achieving adults. Beloit has strong programs in anthropology and museum studies, and a very strong creative writing program.
Beloit the city has improved dramatically and has a great farmer's market, some decent restaurants, and a nice riverfront. Mac's atmosphere's can't be beat. Carleton is in the ideal small college town.
Is Beloit crazy woke, or could a more conservative student attend and not feel out of place?
Anonymous wrote:Never heard of any of these. Your kid will be fine.
Anonymous wrote:We visited Mac, Carleton and St Olaf. FEIW my super nerdy very bookish daughter thought that the kids at Carleton were super odd and awkward. As did I. Just, off. If the tour fixes the school picks out to be extroverted and talk up the school don’t seem to know how to interact as humans, that’s a turnoff. We loved St Olaf. Its is beautiful. The buildings and campus are so picturesque. Carleton are more institutional. st Olaf campus is up on a hill and a farther walk into Northfield, while Carleton is walkable within town. Not that I’d call Northfield a town. It is TINY. Cute, but really limited and isolated. We loved Mac - walkable to things in St Paul, great neighborhood, great campus facilities.
Anonymous wrote:We visited Mac, Carleton and St Olaf. FEIW my super nerdy very bookish daughter thought that the kids at Carleton were super odd and awkward. As did I. Just, off. If the tour fixes the school picks out to be extroverted and talk up the school don’t seem to know how to interact as humans, that’s a turnoff. We loved St Olaf. Its is beautiful. The buildings and campus are so picturesque. Carleton are more institutional. st Olaf campus is up on a hill and a farther walk into Northfield, while Carleton is walkable within town. Not that I’d call Northfield a town. It is TINY. Cute, but really limited and isolated. We loved Mac - walkable to things in St Paul, great neighborhood, great campus facilities.
Anonymous wrote:My child visited Mac and Carleton last spring and walked away feeling like Carleton was too remote but seemed much stronger academically.
The Macalester presentation and panel both leaned hard on the *lack* of academic rigor, which felt weird for a presentation happening with parents in the room. It seems lovely, and I know some really happy graduates, but for the price tag I would like my child to learn something. If I just wanted them to make friendships in a global environment, they could stay here in DC and go to Montgomery College.
Anonymous wrote:Never heard of any of these. Your kid will be fine.
Anonymous wrote:I would luv luv for my DD to go to Carleton, but she doesn't have the grades or the $..lol.. My good friend is from up in that area and attended St. Olaf, and speaks highly of it.
They have a FB page, like it and look around. Can he throw a Frisbee..lol
Anonymous wrote:They are actually pretty different from one another, starting with selectivity. Carleton has an admission rate of about 20% while Beloit is closer to 70%. Macalester is at about 35%. The SAT scores vary proportionally, with Carleton the highest and Beloit about 100+ points lower per section. This may not be important to your kid but you should be aware of the differences.
Macalester is obviously the most urban, being in St Paul. It is also known for its international focus. Carleton is in a small town about 35 miles south of the twin cities. I don't know as much about Beloit, although the kids I knew who went there when I was in college were weird, and the kids I know who go there now are not mainstream. Carleton definitely attracts smart but independent/quirky kids. Macalester is more mainstream.
The kids I know at both Carleton and Macalester today love it. I really liked Carleton, although I do not fit the quirky mold.