Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Significant drop off after Bowdoin among NESCACs. Middlebury is a pauper compared to Amherst, Williams, and Bowdoin. Times change and Colby might also soon pass Midd and definitely Hamilton.
Colby's endowment is 2/3 of Middlebury's as someone pointed out earlier. Colby is similar to Hamilton in terms of endowment.
By endowment per student, this site places these schools in the order of Hamilton, Colby, Middlebury:
Rankings | Largest college endowment per student - Highest endowment per student https://share.google/zjv4XzjEcwcoDgTLw
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Like the stock pick analysis with some tweaks. Move Wesleyan to a sell for same reason as listed for Trinity as Hartford is not a big draw. Upgrade Haverford access to Philly and Holy Cross access to Boston. Debating rating on W&L would twea to sell as its southern location is very rural as opposed to Davidson’s access to Charlotte. But overall great picks!
This is the stock poster. You may be right about Wes: I was on the fence. But Middletown is really not bad, has a walkable downtown, proximity to urban areas. Plus it has had a major downswing the last generation or two and is now holding its own.
Haverford also was on the fence. Hard to be such a second fiddle to Swat and be a buy, but you may be right.
W&L also on the fence but they have so much money and are in the south. Not many people even know they give a full ride, including room and board, to 10% of students. I stick with my “hold” on that one.
Haverford is a dreamy little storybook school and I can see it appealing to kids. If I was a counselor and I had a artsy, "alt" kid, I might put it on a list and see what kind of FA they offered. But for full pay? I dont see the value, at all.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Significant drop off after Bowdoin among NESCACs. Middlebury is a pauper compared to Amherst, Williams, and Bowdoin. Times change and Colby might also soon pass Midd and definitely Hamilton.
Colby's endowment is 2/3 of Middlebury's as someone pointed out earlier. Colby is similar to Hamilton in terms of endowment.
Anonymous wrote:Tradition, selectivity, outcomes, endowment.
Anonymous wrote:Ignore stagnant or declining applications at Colgate, Hamilton, and Middlebury. Also google WSJ feature article on exodus of kids to SEC.
Anonymous wrote:Significant drop off after Bowdoin among NESCACs. Middlebury is a pauper compared to Amherst, Williams, and Bowdoin. Times change and Colby might also soon pass Midd and definitely Hamilton.
Anonymous wrote:
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Bless your heart! My goodness, this thread is high entertainment.
Anonymous wrote:Can’t imagine spending more than 4 hours at Colby, Colgate, Hamilton, or Midd. But their boosters will tell us there is a Walmart and a Panera 15 minutes away assuming it’s not snowing.
Anonymous wrote:The hatred of HC is really interesting. Why is this? Is the school that overrated? Is it the catholic version of Trinity College as it was for Episcopal schools? As for HC I never knew it existed till living in NY. It was always Williams, Amherst, Bowdoin, Haverford Swat, Pomona, Kenyon…..that were tossed around as places to go.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Yeah, but that would require PP to actually know what those are.
True. Agree. Like knowing a cold fork from a salad fork. That Creek is a club not a stream. That Jackson is a town not a ski resort. Jupiter is a town not a planet for us. The list could go on and on. Fitzgerald nailed it yet it still continues.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Can’t imagine spending more than 4 hours at Colby, Colgate, Hamilton, or Midd. But their boosters will tell us there is a Walmart and a Panera 15 minutes away assuming it’s not snowing.
I went to Harvard and don’t really remember dining out or going shopping in Cambridge or Boston. Yes, there were outings on weekends on the T, but social life was on campus, not outside. Partly, Boston seemed so small and insular, having gone to high school in Manhattan.
My DC is a city kid but will be attending one of the SLACS in the middle of nowhere. I’m actually happy about it. I’d like to imagine there will be more bonding and community unlike places like NYU or BU or USC, schools initially favored by DC. Plus, a lot of money saved on DoorDash! DC can work in NYC or Boston or LA after college.
hm did you actually go to harvard? probably not. many people there including when i was there ventured into harvard square a lot
Anonymous wrote:Kind of condescending to suggest kids are at state U’s for financial reasons only.
Anonymous wrote:Kind of condescending to suggest kids are at state U’s for financial reasons only.