Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I think Oberlin and Kenyon both suffer from being in Ohio. The kind of kid who wants to go to Oberlin doesn’t want to be in MAGA land. That’s why they’re trying to attract students with so much merit. If Oberlin was in a blue state, it wouldn’t be handing out money.
Explain Grinnell then. It’s in the heart of MAGA country and in the middle of nowhere and súper left wing and kicks the snot out of Kenyon and Oberlin in the rankings.
Grinnell has a huge endowment and tosses merit aid around like nobody’s business. Money conquers all.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I think Oberlin and Kenyon both suffer from being in Ohio. The kind of kid who wants to go to Oberlin doesn’t want to be in MAGA land. That’s why they’re trying to attract students with so much merit. If Oberlin was in a blue state, it wouldn’t be handing out money.
Explain Grinnell then. It’s in the heart of MAGA country and in the middle of nowhere and súper left wing and kicks the snot out of Kenyon and Oberlin in the rankings.
Grinnell has a very big endowment (usually in the top 10 or so for largest endowment per student of any school). It still gets ranked much lower than most of the schools with similar amounts of $$.
“Much lower?” Really? It’s ranked 11th in the current rankings, which sure ain’t low, and it’s ranked 8th with the service academies taken out, which is very high. Several of the seven liberal arts colleges above it have higher endowments.
In other words, you’re wrong.
I still contend I'm right. Pomona and Amherst would be the only selective LACs above Grinnell based on endowment per student, so I'd say they are ranked significantly lower than those $$ peers (Swarthmore and Williams would be right behind Grinnell in that regard). No offense to Grinnell but it doesn't get mentioned in that top ranked group it is a part of in terms of endowment per student.
https://www.collegeraptor.com/college-rankings/details/EndowmentPerStudent/
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I think Oberlin and Kenyon both suffer from being in Ohio. The kind of kid who wants to go to Oberlin doesn’t want to be in MAGA land. That’s why they’re trying to attract students with so much merit. If Oberlin was in a blue state, it wouldn’t be handing out money.
Explain Grinnell then. It’s in the heart of MAGA country and in the middle of nowhere and súper left wing and kicks the snot out of Kenyon and Oberlin in the rankings.
Grinnell has a very big endowment (usually in the top 10 or so for largest endowment per student of any school). It still gets ranked much lower than most of the schools with similar amounts of $$.
“Much lower?” Really? It’s ranked 11th in the current rankings, which sure ain’t low, and it’s ranked 8th with the service academies taken out, which is very high. Several of the seven liberal arts colleges above it have higher endowments.
In other words, you’re wrong.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Carleton is way too woke. My DW hated it
Woke as in dropping legacy? Yes. (I personally agree with their doing so.)
Woke as in trigger warnings and such? Not as much. Here’s an interesting video by two of their most popular profs (based on Rate My Professors anyway), one of whom is also an alum:
https://m.youtube.com/watch?v=qZFyl8wmKqg
No woke as in crazy liberal professors who won’t let a different viewpoint be expressed in the classroom
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Carleton is way too woke. My DW hated it
Woke as in dropping legacy? Yes. (I personally agree with their doing so.)
Woke as in trigger warnings and such? Not as much. Here’s an interesting video by two of their most popular profs (based on Rate My Professors anyway), one of whom is also an alum:
https://m.youtube.com/watch?v=qZFyl8wmKqg
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I think Oberlin and Kenyon both suffer from being in Ohio. The kind of kid who wants to go to Oberlin doesn’t want to be in MAGA land. That’s why they’re trying to attract students with so much merit. If Oberlin was in a blue state, it wouldn’t be handing out money.
Kenyon just suffers because of the outcome weighting that is pegged to this Pell Grant stuff. Peer assessment rating is generally higher than the schools that moved above it. Kenyon test scores also higher than a lot of schools coming above it. Kenyon ranked 15th in undergraduate teaching. Kenyon has difficulty competing on a lot of these newly emphasized DEI metrics, though, and being in rural Ohio is possibly a factor.
Oberlin has an array of problems, mostly do with the campus culture and extreme wokeness.
I actually think that Trinity is underrated because of this. It's in a bad neighborhood, although at the same time kids want city schools and it's in a city. There aren't that many LACs in cities: Tufts, Emory, Tulane, Macalaster, but not many others. It's also not as woke as Oberlin by far so for people who want a little more balance it's a good choice. Not sure why it's not higher up on the ranking. It has good academics, a nice campus, and is sporty and it's not in the boonies like Kenyon.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I think Oberlin and Kenyon both suffer from being in Ohio. The kind of kid who wants to go to Oberlin doesn’t want to be in MAGA land. That’s why they’re trying to attract students with so much merit. If Oberlin was in a blue state, it wouldn’t be handing out money.
Explain Grinnell then. It’s in the heart of MAGA country and in the middle of nowhere and súper left wing and kicks the snot out of Kenyon and Oberlin in the rankings.
Grinnell has a very big endowment (usually in the top 10 or so for largest endowment per student of any school). It still gets ranked much lower than most of the schools with similar amounts of $$.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I think Oberlin and Kenyon both suffer from being in Ohio. The kind of kid who wants to go to Oberlin doesn’t want to be in MAGA land. That’s why they’re trying to attract students with so much merit. If Oberlin was in a blue state, it wouldn’t be handing out money.
Kenyon just suffers because of the outcome weighting that is pegged to this Pell Grant stuff. Peer assessment rating is generally higher than the schools that moved above it. Kenyon test scores also higher than a lot of schools coming above it. Kenyon ranked 15th in undergraduate teaching. Kenyon has difficulty competing on a lot of these newly emphasized DEI metrics, though, and being in rural Ohio is possibly a factor.
Oberlin has an array of problems, mostly do with the campus culture and extreme wokeness.
I actually think that Trinity is underrated because of this. It's in a bad neighborhood, although at the same time kids want city schools and it's in a city. There aren't that many LACs in cities: Tufts, Emory, Tulane, Macalaster, but not many others. It's also not as woke as Oberlin by far so for people who want a little more balance it's a good choice. Not sure why it's not higher up on the ranking. It has good academics, a nice campus, and is sporty and it's not in the boonies like Kenyon.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I think Oberlin and Kenyon both suffer from being in Ohio. The kind of kid who wants to go to Oberlin doesn’t want to be in MAGA land. That’s why they’re trying to attract students with so much merit. If Oberlin was in a blue state, it wouldn’t be handing out money.
Explain Grinnell then. It’s in the heart of MAGA country and in the middle of nowhere and súper left wing and kicks the snot out of Kenyon and Oberlin in the rankings.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I think Oberlin and Kenyon both suffer from being in Ohio. The kind of kid who wants to go to Oberlin doesn’t want to be in MAGA land. That’s why they’re trying to attract students with so much merit. If Oberlin was in a blue state, it wouldn’t be handing out money.
Explain Grinnell then. It’s in the heart of MAGA country and in the middle of nowhere and súper left wing and kicks the snot out of Kenyon and Oberlin in the rankings.
Anonymous wrote:I think Oberlin and Kenyon both suffer from being in Ohio. The kind of kid who wants to go to Oberlin doesn’t want to be in MAGA land. That’s why they’re trying to attract students with so much merit. If Oberlin was in a blue state, it wouldn’t be handing out money.