Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:The variables between them make this a personal decision. You can't crowd source this one. My DS only applied to small schools, for instance, so Colgate for him; but my friends DD only wanted a rah-rah football college, so BC for her.
I suppose if the focus is just "the odds," you are less likely to get into Colgate without ED, but you have more spots available to ED at BC so more likely to get in ED generally.
Also consider that if the kid is this up in the air about which of these very different schools is a better fit, is ED really a good idea?
This. Those schools are SO different. If a student EDs they need to be 110% sure that's what they want. Being torn between these two schools suggests your kid just doesn't know yet.
I do agree that BC & Colgate are quite different, but a particular student could be equally attracted to both schools. Colgate University reported its top 8 overlap schools as: Boston College, Middlebury College, Dartmouth College, Tufts University, Bowdoin College, Colby College, Bucknell University, and Hamilton College.
Personally, I view Bucknell University as the most similar to Colgate University. (Bucknell & Dartmouth list Colgate as their most common overlap school.)
Dartmouth & Middlebury also seem like easy to understand overlaps for Colgate. (However, BC, Middlebury, Tufts, Bowdoin, or Colby do not list Colgate as a top 8 overlap school.)
FWIW College of the Holy Cross lists BC & Colgate as its top 2 overlap schools.
Also, FWIW, I view Wake Forest University as somewhat similar to Colgate University.