Anonymous wrote:Bizarre that NT is so rare now that "quirky" means ASD etc.
Used to be the kids riding unicycles at MIT or into folk dancing or Tolkien.
Anonymous wrote:Rice would be good - no Greek life, no language requirement, smart somewhat quirky student body, nice residential college communities
Anonymous wrote:Bizarre that NT is so rare now that "quirky" means ASD etc.
Used to be the kids riding unicycles at MIT or into folk dancing or Tolkien.
Anonymous wrote:Harvey Mudd will be more expensive than Princeton. Rochester with merit coukd get you down to 70K. Recommend Case (generous merit) or W&M. Rice also great but pricey.
Anonymous wrote:I have the same kid, but she wants other sciences. After scouring DCUM and attending hours of virtual info sessions, we have come up with this list(not applying to all of them - these just seemed like the right fit):
Rose
Colorado School of Mines
Rochester
RIT
RPI
WPI
Case Western
Pitt
GT
Purdue
Wooster
NC State
William & Mary
I am glad we did virtual sessions before planning any in person visits. Virtual gave us a great overview of curriculum and insight into students so we could plan trips based on fit.
Hope this helps.
Anonymous wrote:This is going to sound weird, but what your kid wants is a school like Iowa State. Engineering is huge, and almost all of the STEM kids are in engineering. The physics department has like 25 kids per year. Once you get beyond the physics 101 classes with all of the engineering kids, the classes will be tiny.
But, and this is the important part here, Ames/ISU is the host of AmesLab, which is a US DOE research laboratory. So, there are a lot of physics profs working on various projects there. It's really easy for a bright physics undergraduate to get research assistantship positions and work side by side with professors and grad students.
I imagine the same would be true for any physics department at a huge engineering school that also has significant government lab facilities. That might be something to consider for your kid.