Anonymous wrote:Madison is what you want. Burlington is like Madison, but Madison is larger so you won't be able to explore it all in 2 days. Walking around the lakes with headphones is the perfect way to escape. But it isn't a major city, just a really nice sized city. There is a reason it is consistently ranked as one of the top college towns.
Anonymous wrote:I would also look abroad, eg Dublin or the UK.
Anonymous wrote:Northampton is lovely, but Burlington is bigger and better.Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The Amherst campus is walking distance to town. Smith is also walking distance to the main part of Northampton.
Umass is walking distance to town as well.
yeah but there's not much going on in Amherst. It's a town, not a city. If Burlington isn't enough, there's no way Amherst will fit.
Try Northampton instead - Smith
Northampton is lovely, but Burlington is bigger and better.Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The Amherst campus is walking distance to town. Smith is also walking distance to the main part of Northampton.
Umass is walking distance to town as well.
yeah but there's not much going on in Amherst. It's a town, not a city. If Burlington isn't enough, there's no way Amherst will fit.
Try Northampton instead - Smith
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Hi, we are a CA family trying to figure out the Midwest/East Coast. My kid is looking for colleges that have walkable towns/ethnic food plus the ability to find some anonymity. We happened to spend 4 days in Burlington last summer. I thought it might be a fit (loved the houses w/porch hammocks) but my kid felt it was too small - they saw the whole town in 2 days plus there wasn’t anywhere else you could easily escape to. (Love public transportation/definitely no car freshman year)
Not looking for info on colleges in cities (Macalaster), big college towns (U mich) or ones with easy metro access (UMCP)
Trying to get a sense of places like:
Williamsburg- William &Mary
Mass 5 college consortium
Appleton WI - Lawrence
Kalamazoo MI
Worcester MA - Holy Cross, Clark
I think they could be a fit for a small/medium school but they are used to city living and are introverted so occasionally want a break from people they know. Want to be able to take a 2 hour walk and listen to headphones or go to lunch/cafe/bookstore without running into all people they know.
Welcome suggestions or if you had a similar kid, how did they deal/where did they go? Thanks
I'm not sure most places will fit her desire to go to a cafe without seeing anyone they know unless a big city and she goes far from campus. Even in a big city, the places close to campus are going to be filled with students.
Worcester might actually work for this
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Hi, we are a CA family trying to figure out the Midwest/East Coast. My kid is looking for colleges that have walkable towns/ethnic food plus the ability to find some anonymity. We happened to spend 4 days in Burlington last summer. I thought it might be a fit (loved the houses w/porch hammocks) but my kid felt it was too small - they saw the whole town in 2 days plus there wasn’t anywhere else you could easily escape to. (Love public transportation/definitely no car freshman year)
Not looking for info on colleges in cities (Macalaster), big college towns (U mich) or ones with easy metro access (UMCP)
Trying to get a sense of places like:
Williamsburg- William &Mary
Mass 5 college consortium
Appleton WI - Lawrence
Kalamazoo MI
Worcester MA - Holy Cross, Clark
I think they could be a fit for a small/medium school but they are used to city living and are introverted so occasionally want a break from people they know. Want to be able to take a 2 hour walk and listen to headphones or go to lunch/cafe/bookstore without running into all people they know.
Welcome suggestions or if you had a similar kid, how did they deal/where did they go? Thanks
I'm not sure most places will fit her desire to go to a cafe without seeing anyone they know unless a big city and she goes far from campus. Even in a big city, the places close to campus are going to be filled with students.
Anonymous wrote:Hi, we are a CA family trying to figure out the Midwest/East Coast. My kid is looking for colleges that have walkable towns/ethnic food plus the ability to find some anonymity. We happened to spend 4 days in Burlington last summer. I thought it might be a fit (loved the houses w/porch hammocks) but my kid felt it was too small - they saw the whole town in 2 days plus there wasn’t anywhere else you could easily escape to. (Love public transportation/definitely no car freshman year)
Not looking for info on colleges in cities (Macalaster), big college towns (U mich) or ones with easy metro access (UMCP)
Trying to get a sense of places like:
Williamsburg- William &Mary
Mass 5 college consortium
Appleton WI - Lawrence
Kalamazoo MI
Worcester MA - Holy Cross, Clark
I think they could be a fit for a small/medium school but they are used to city living and are introverted so occasionally want a break from people they know. Want to be able to take a 2 hour walk and listen to headphones or go to lunch/cafe/bookstore without running into all people they know.
Welcome suggestions or if you had a similar kid, how did they deal/where did they go? Thanks
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The Amherst campus is walking distance to town. Smith is also walking distance to the main part of Northampton.
Umass is walking distance to town as well.