Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:I strongly recommend you visit and go with the school environment that your daughter feels is the right fit for her.
FWIW, I majored in Economics at Wellesley back in the day. It was and is a great department, and there are many opportunities for majors to work with professors. I went on to get my Master’s and Ph.D.in Economics at an Ivy, and my best friend there had done her undergrad work in Economics at Chicago. She loved being at a big university, but her experience was consistent with the “where fun goes to die” reputation. It was intense.
Congratulations to your daughter and good luck!
Thanks! Was your undergrad experience roughly in the last decade or so or prior to that?
I graduated from Wellesley this century but not in the last ten years. I do have a niece who has attended in the last decade, and we shared a fairly similar college experience at the heart of it all, despite the almost 20 year difference.
I loved the place, and it was the right place for me to land at 18. My niece would say the same. There is a real community at Wellesley, and I enjoyed majoring in Economics (not my intention when I arrived — was planning on majoring in Physics, but that is another story) while at the same time being able to take a variety of other classes. I took and Art history class that changed the way I look at art, learned a third language, and did research with a science professor. That is the beauty of a liberal arts college. In addition, my professors at Wellesley were excellent teachers. I appreciate their talents all the more now that I am a college professor myself. My niece majored in biology and music. She is in med school now and has told me how much she appreciated being able to take a wide variety of courses while still being prepared for med school.
Like I said, my grad school friend liked her U Chicago days, although she would be the first to tell you that they were intense. Wellesley and U Chicago are pretty different places. I imagine that a visit to each will move the dial in a direction for your daughter. It’s a great choice to have!