Anonymous wrote:I love Kenyon, but PP is correct about it being somewhat of an economic bubble: NYTimes Upshot article showed that Kenyon had 20% of students from the top 1% family income level. It's in the top ten colleges/universities on this metric--which is surprising for a highly selective college in the middle of nowhere.
As to earlier, which is a back-up discussion.
Looking at the CDS, Kenyon and Oberlin have nearly identical SAT ranges, but Kenyon average GPA is 3.94 while Oberlin's is 3.57. Kenyon has a slightly lower acceptance rate 25-26% to Oberlin's 28-29%.
Grinnell and Carleton have SAT ranges that are about 30-50 points higher, no GPA info but ranking suggest similar to Kenyon/Oberlin. Acceptance rates 20-21%. These two have the slightest of edges over the selectivity of the other two but we're getting into meaningless differences here--at that point you should look at preferred location, programs of interest etc over "ranking" in my view.
Anonymous wrote:Good school. But no real economic diversity. Lots of prep school kids and public school kids are from places like Darien or Scarsdale.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Great relationships result from being away from it all.
Don’t disagree, but for some kids who want a different experience near or in a big city Kenyon would be a lousy choice. Strikes me as a particularly important place to visit first since it’s rather extreme in that sense. NYU/BU on one end and Kenyon one of those on the other.
Anonymous wrote:Great relationships result from being away from it all.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Why pay big bucks for Kenyon when Carleton, Grinnell and Oberlin are all better and similarly located in small midwestern towns? Kenyon is a backup school.
I don’t really agree that Kenyon is a back up school but the others are slightly better. Also, Oberlin isn’t similarly located because it’s in a town with much more going on than Gambier, which has a small hotel and one restaurant and nothing else. Oberlin has a new hotel and restaurant, about 10 other places to eat, a movie theater, two coffee shops etc. and they are all across the quad. Grinnell has a town as well but it’s slightly further away and has fewer shops and restaurants but the campus is lovely. I’ve never seen Carleton so I can’t comment there. Of the three I know, Oberlin has the most to offer overall.
Oberlin is definitely not considered academically stronger than Kenyon. Kenyon is generally considered more intellectually rigorous than Oberlin and Oberlin more "artsy" Both are in small towns, but Oberlin has a bit more built up around the college in large part because of the performing arts aspect of the school. Carleton and Grinnell are considered above both Kenyon and Oberlin--though it depends on programs.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Why pay big bucks for Kenyon when Carleton, Grinnell and Oberlin are all better and similarly located in small midwestern towns? Kenyon is a backup school.
I don’t really agree that Kenyon is a back up school but the others are slightly better. Also, Oberlin isn’t similarly located because it’s in a town with much more going on than Gambier, which has a small hotel and one restaurant and nothing else. Oberlin has a new hotel and restaurant, about 10 other places to eat, a movie theater, two coffee shops etc. and they are all across the quad. Grinnell has a town as well but it’s slightly further away and has fewer shops and restaurants but the campus is lovely. I’ve never seen Carleton so I can’t comment there. Of the three I know, Oberlin has the most to offer overall.