Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I would look at big state schools - Wisconsin, Michigan...
This is what I was thinking too - large public schools.
I think the same - and try to get into the Honors College in one of these schools to have the cohort she may be looking for (i.e. intellectual type)
the honors colleges at big 10 schools are filled with those who used it as a safety OR got into lower ivies and couldn't afford it.
BUT they still are driven to want the same jobs/end results as those who go to penn for example.
people who are saying go to large publics are wrong. the upper tier of large publics have lots of 'chip on their shoulders' kids who are smart but know they have to grind 5x as hard as 'target school' kids because they have teh same aspirations.
OP's daughter would do best at a small private lac where there are way less gunner kids.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Outside a few schools like Swarthmore and MIT, most colleges are as laid back or intense as you want to make it. It often comes down more to the circle of friends you have than the school in question.
If you're a bright student and capable of handling a large workload, really, what is there to be afraid of?
Agree with the above post. Also, keep in mind that her perceptions as a sophomore can really evolve by the time she becomes a senior. She may even seek out a more competitive environment so that she can reach her potential and be surrounded by equals.
People who prefer competitive environments aren't somehow superior. She'd also be surrounded by her equals at other colleges and might be better able to realize her potential if she were in an environment where that (rather that winning or getting ahead) was the focus.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Outside a few schools like Swarthmore and MIT, most colleges are as laid back or intense as you want to make it. It often comes down more to the circle of friends you have than the school in question.
If you're a bright student and capable of handling a large workload, really, what is there to be afraid of?
Agree with the above post. Also, keep in mind that her perceptions as a sophomore can really evolve by the time she becomes a senior. She may even seek out a more competitive environment so that she can reach her potential and be surrounded by equals.
Anonymous wrote:Outside a few schools like Swarthmore and MIT, most colleges are as laid back or intense as you want to make it. It often comes down more to the circle of friends you have than the school in question.
If you're a bright student and capable of handling a large workload, really, what is there to be afraid of?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I would look at big state schools - Wisconsin, Michigan...
This is what I was thinking too - large public schools.
I think the same - and try to get into the Honors College in one of these schools to have the cohort she may be looking for (i.e. intellectual type)
Anonymous wrote:What about Reed?
It's very intellectual, but not super type A. Suburban location in Portland.