Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Another post has a link to the college acceptances over the last three years at Harvard-Westlake. A whopping 59 of 62 applicants got into Kenyon, way more than any other better known LAC. This confirms what I’ve said all along: it’s a rich kid school and it’s a second choice for everyone.
Harvard-Westlake produces high-achieving students and has high average SAT and ACT scores that would make the average H-W student attractive to Kenyon. If Harvard-Westlake is funneling kids into Kenyon, it's probably because the school counselors are getting positive feedback from their Kenyon matriculants, and a school like that probably has pretty good school counselors.
Nope. At Amherst it was 6 of 33. At UVA 12 of 62. At Notre Dame 2 of 19. Even at Michigan it’s 87 of 210. The list goes on. The “average” H-W student isn’t getting into these schools. Also, it isn’t just the “average” H-W student getting into Kenyon. It’s virtually all of them!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:when there are similar schools on the East Coast? Not trying to be snarky; genuinely wondering what these schools have that a Bates/Bowdoin/Colby/Hamilton does not.
They are all safer than Bates. What's unsafe about Bates? Genuinely curious, don't know.
They are all easier admits than Bowdoin.
They all offer merit scholarships that are not offered at Hamilton.
Better weather. [OK... Ohio and Iowa winters are not Maine winters, but they still suck.]
Lewiston (Bates) has some Somalian refugees settled there. Poster is racist.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:when there are similar schools on the East Coast? Not trying to be snarky; genuinely wondering what these schools have that a Bates/Bowdoin/Colby/Hamilton does not.
They are all safer than Bates. What's unsafe about Bates? Genuinely curious, don't know.
They are all easier admits than Bowdoin.
They all offer merit scholarships that are not offered at Hamilton.
Better weather. [OK... Ohio and Iowa winters are not Maine winters, but they still suck.]
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Kenyon’s English department is no joke.
The joke will be on you if you graduate with a BA in English from Kenyon, lmao.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:DS picked Kenyon over Grinnell. Something just clicked for him. Excellent dorms, food and athletic facilities. The students were friendly and nice. He has been in the ultra competitive east coast world and wants to try something else. I can’t say I blame him. Grinnell was wonderful but in the end too remote.
Amazing statement as Kenyon's location is very remote.
But at least you can drive to Kenyon from DC area. You really can't drive to Grinnell easily from DC area.
From which part can you drive easily to Grinnell? Its a student detention centre.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Kenyon’s English department is no joke.
The joke will be on you if you graduate with a BA in English from Kenyon, lmao.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:DS picked Kenyon over Grinnell. Something just clicked for him. Excellent dorms, food and athletic facilities. The students were friendly and nice. He has been in the ultra competitive east coast world and wants to try something else. I can’t say I blame him. Grinnell was wonderful but in the end too remote.
Amazing statement as Kenyon's location is very remote.
But at least you can drive to Kenyon from DC area. You really can't drive to Grinnell easily from DC area.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:DS picked Kenyon over Grinnell. Something just clicked for him. Excellent dorms, food and athletic facilities. The students were friendly and nice. He has been in the ultra competitive east coast world and wants to try something else. I can’t say I blame him. Grinnell was wonderful but in the end too remote.
Amazing statement as Kenyon's location is very remote.
Anonymous wrote:DS picked Kenyon over Grinnell. Something just clicked for him. Excellent dorms, food and athletic facilities. The students were friendly and nice. He has been in the ultra competitive east coast world and wants to try something else. I can’t say I blame him. Grinnell was wonderful but in the end too remote.
Anonymous wrote:Denison and Grinnell both are 80k schools that offer 25-30K off in merit - in this way they're similar.
For my kid, coming from a NYC private, I made him pick a couple financial fits and he preferred Denison's location and vibe. It's a bit more straight ahead, whereas Grinnell can be a bit kookier. I wouldnt be shocked if others from the NE preferred it.
Anonymous wrote:We participated at the All Roads Lead to Oberlin event last week. Really liked the campus and our student guides. Loved the easy access to the Conservatory. What I don't understand is the ranking Oberlin, which is #51 among National LAC per US News. That seems low. How is the academic rigor of Oberlin compared to the same tier National Universities, such as Case Western for biology/premed track? How about comparing Oberlin to big public such as UIUC?