Anonymous wrote:My daughter is well rounded and smart. But, she has no interest in drinking or smoking marijuana. Her grades are great with lots of extra curriculars. What good schools do you think she would find others like herself?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My smart, social, non-partier girl is really happy at her small Catholic college. Small schools tend to plan lots of on-campus activities for their students and, because there isn’t much else to do, the kids participate because it’s not dorky in groups. My DD is involved in tons of activities and her friend group revolves around kids she met in the Honors Program (tends to be the more focused students) and those who do the service projects and campus ministry things. Gravitating toward a calmer group of kids has been key. She’s out and about all the time, but not doing things that are troubling. It is possible to have good, clean fun!
Couldn’t be happier!
I have a high school senior daughter who sounds very similar. She is currently at a Catholic school and is interested in a small Catholic college. If you would be willing to share what school it is, I would really appreciate it. She is currently considering Catholic, Loyola of Chicago, Manhattan, and Providence, in addition to some larger state schools. Thanks
I am a PC alum. Loved my time there, but I think there are far better options for a non-partying student. The joke is...it's a drinking school with a Catholic problem - it's pervasive.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My smart, social, non-partier girl is really happy at her small Catholic college. Small schools tend to plan lots of on-campus activities for their students and, because there isn’t much else to do, the kids participate because it’s not dorky in groups. My DD is involved in tons of activities and her friend group revolves around kids she met in the Honors Program (tends to be the more focused students) and those who do the service projects and campus ministry things. Gravitating toward a calmer group of kids has been key. She’s out and about all the time, but not doing things that are troubling. It is possible to have good, clean fun!
Couldn’t be happier!
I have a high school senior daughter who sounds very similar. She is currently at a Catholic school and is interested in a small Catholic college. If you would be willing to share what school it is, I would really appreciate it. She is currently considering Catholic, Loyola of Chicago, Manhattan, and Providence, in addition to some larger state schools. Thanks
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It seems like advice is all over the board, which leads me to believe it's the student and not the college in most instances. My daughter was very much like yours in high school and never even went to a party at all. She's at Oberlin and loves it there. Lots of peers who want to play Dungeons and Dragons, listen to really good music and have fun dinner parties in their dorm on weekends. I'm sure there are many schools where she could have found a similar peer group (and no Greek life) but she found lots of similar people at Oberlin for sure.
Im a PP with a daughter like OP's and am glad to hear this about your DD's experience at Oberlin, as it's a college my daughter is considering.
Anonymous wrote:I was a non-partier and loved my SLAC in a rather isolated place. The campus was a vibrant place with tons to do, including free concerts, theater, dance performances. Some of these were student produced (so students spent a lot of time on practicing and rehearsals), others were professional groups brought in. I felt that I would be more able to meet "my people" at a smaller school, and I was very happy with my choice.
I can imagine there are small, isolated schools without much going on, so that's definitely something to watch out for. However, I disagree that a larger city is necessary.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I'm curious what people specifically think there is to do in a large city for 18-22-year-olds that doesn't involve drinking and that wouldn't be available to their peers at a campus in a smaller town.
My kid goes to college in the Twin Cities of Minnesota. She's been in school about a month - so far has gone to a Twins game, a few concerts, a museum, a sculpture garden, tried a bunch of different restaurants, saw a musical, and went to a zoo. There's seriously so much to do, and I imagine there would be even more options in a city like Chicago or NYC.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I'm curious what people specifically think there is to do in a large city for 18-22-year-olds that doesn't involve drinking and that wouldn't be available to their peers at a campus in a smaller town.
My kid goes to college in the Twin Cities of Minnesota. She's been in school about a month - so far has gone to a Twins game, a few concerts, a museum, a sculpture garden, tried a bunch of different restaurants, saw a musical, and went to a zoo. There's seriously so much to do, and I imagine there would be even more options in a city like Chicago or NYC.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Large schools
Best answer. At a big school, there are enough social niches tha you can hang with the crowd you like and mostly ignore the rest.
Anonymous wrote:My smart, social, non-partier girl is really happy at her small Catholic college. Small schools tend to plan lots of on-campus activities for their students and, because there isn’t much else to do, the kids participate because it’s not dorky in groups. My DD is involved in tons of activities and her friend group revolves around kids she met in the Honors Program (tends to be the more focused students) and those who do the service projects and campus ministry things. Gravitating toward a calmer group of kids has been key. She’s out and about all the time, but not doing things that are troubling. It is possible to have good, clean fun!
Couldn’t be happier!
Anonymous wrote:I'm curious what people specifically think there is to do in a large city for 18-22-year-olds that doesn't involve drinking and that wouldn't be available to their peers at a campus in a smaller town.