Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Nope, I would not. if I haven’t heard of it, neither have most employers.
Ninety five percent of kids will do well at any college that has a major in their area of interest. This notion that fit is some concept that would eliminate tons of schools is nothing more than a marketing ploy for the lesser known schools.
Exactly. "Fit" is way overrated.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:No, I’m not talking Denison or Kenyon or Knox or St. John’s. My kid is interested in schools like Northland College, Green Mountain College, Berry College.
I've never heard of these either.
very funny.You know you have heard of them (although I'm not too familiar with Knox to be honest).
![]()
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:No, I’m not talking Denison or Kenyon or Knox or St. John’s. My kid is interested in schools like Northland College, Green Mountain College, Berry College.
I've never heard of these either.
very funny.You know you have heard of them (although I'm not too familiar with Knox to be honest).
Anonymous wrote:Nope, I would not. if I haven’t heard of it, neither have most employers.
Ninety five percent of kids will do well at any college that has a major in their area of interest. This notion that fit is some concept that would eliminate tons of schools is nothing more than a marketing ploy for the lesser known schools.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:All the schools you mentioned are Christian. Does your kid have a particular desire to attend a Christian SLAC? Not criticizing that choice, but it’s just a possible explanation.
Northland and Green Mounrain aren’t. These are hardcore liberal environmentalist schools.
One is Unitarian and the other is Methodist. They’re on the liberal side of Christianity, but they’re still Christian.
Unitarian is a lot of things, but Christian ain't one of them.
They would disagree with you.
Also, you’re an ass.
UU here - and UU is based in Christianity and rejected the concept of the Trinity (thus the Unitarian). And historically, Jesus is revered as a great leader and man of faith, but not as a deity. That said, UUs borrow freely from other faiths and traditions, many UUs do not consider themselves "Christian" as such (being Jewish, Hindu, Wiccan etc.) and the cornerstone of the faith is the dignity and worth of ALL human beings no matter what, there is no dogma, and the Bible is just a book from which to learn.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:No, I’m not talking Denison or Kenyon or Knox or St. John’s. My kid is interested in schools like Northland College, Green Mountain College, Berry College.
I've never heard of these either.
You know you have heard of them (although I'm not too familiar with Knox to be honest).Anonymous wrote:No, I’m not talking Denison or Kenyon or Knox or St. John’s. My kid is interested in schools like Northland College, Green Mountain College, Berry College.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The have you heard of it test is pointless OP. We’ve all heard of large state colleges with middling academics but great althletic programs. What percentage of Americans have heard of Pomona, Harvey Mudd, Haverford, Grinnell, Macalaster, Swarthmore, Davidson or Kenyon?
There are a lot of metrics on which to choose a college— size, location, strength in your area of specialty, graduate placement, cost, and very definitely, will my kid thrive there. But have I heard of it is a bad one. Most people have only heard of Ivys/top 25 national universities, big state schools, football/basketball powerhouses, and colleges in their geographic area. That leaves out a lot of excellent colleges.
Right, but with a couple exceptions in your list, those are well ranked, well thought of schools.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:All the schools you mentioned are Christian. Does your kid have a particular desire to attend a Christian SLAC? Not criticizing that choice, but it’s just a possible explanation.
These schools are “Christian” in the same way that Carleton, Grinnell, Elon, Boston University, and Emory are. Aka not really at all.
Berry definitely is religious. They talk about Christian principles in their mission statement. The others are affiliated with churches, but appear less religious in an impact on everyday life sense. But don’t kid yourself; if a school is affiliated with a religion it makes a difference.
- Jewish Georgetown grad who definitely felt the impact of Georgetown’s Catholic identity
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:All the schools you mentioned are Christian. Does your kid have a particular desire to attend a Christian SLAC? Not criticizing that choice, but it’s just a possible explanation.
Northland and Green Mounrain aren’t. These are hardcore liberal environmentalist schools.
One is Unitarian and the other is Methodist. They’re on the liberal side of Christianity, but they’re still Christian.
Unitarian is a lot of things, but Christian ain't one of them.
They would disagree with you.
Also, you’re an ass.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:No, I’m not talking Denison or Kenyon or Knox or St. John’s. My kid is interested in schools like Northland College, Green Mountain College, Berry College.
I've heard of Green Mountai. Very granola crunchy. Also check out Warren Wilson College.