Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous[b wrote:]Do most college-aged kids date much? The serious students? [/b]My cis daughter, at a mixed gender SLAC does not.
Yes, most college aged kids date quite a bit.
Not sure about the "serious" ones, but the fun ones do.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous[b wrote:]Do most college-aged kids date much? The serious students? [/b]My cis daughter, at a mixed gender SLAC does not.
Yes, most college aged kids date quite a bit.
Anonymous wrote:Do most college-aged kids date much? The serious students? My cis daughter, at a mixed gender SLAC does not.
Anonymous wrote:Don't laugh but Grandma graduated from MHC in 1928.
They have a very active alumni department. Even in
Grandma's late 80's the college was doing outreach so that
Grandma could attend alumni functions.
Grandma met Grandpa at the wedding of a friend. Grandpa
went to Swarthmore. Grandpa flunked out of Swarthmore one
year so it took him 5 years to graduate. Grandpa always
felt that Grandma was much better educated than him and
that MHC was the better college.
Grandma was lifelong friends with her classmates from MHC.
There are very nice folk at the college. I'd recommend spending several days there.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I would urge her to opt for another school. Meeting guys shouldn't be hard work. As for taking classes at another school, it's a time suck. Take the bus, take the class, get back on the bus.
Everyone's goal is not to meet guys. My DD has plenty of guy friends in HS. My smart, shy child wants to major in STEM without being shouted down or doubted all of the time by guys. She plans co-ed for grad school and fully realizes she will have to work with men in the work world. She just wants a chance to develop her science skills without men overshadowing her. She wants a more female supportive environment.
Anonymous wrote:How hard/easy is it to take classes at Amherst or UMass, and have a social life with students from those schools? Isn't it like a 45 minute bus ride?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The plurality if not majority of students are cis gandered and straight. She will still be in the majority.Anonymous wrote:DD liked Smith a lot (great school, beautiful campus, cosy feel, great town, family members have attended in earlier decades). But she is worried that as a straight cis-gendered woman she might feel out of place. (She was told that more than half of current smith students identify as LGBTQ). She is very comfortable with that community but worries that someone not part of it will have fewer social opportunistic and will feel more isolated. Can anyone with recent experience with Smith comment? DD is not by any stretch a political conservative but she is in some ways a fairly conventional kid (she is also interested in several southern schools, is possibly interested in joining a sorority, etc).
Not at Smith.
Anonymous wrote:Really? FFS.
Anonymous wrote:The plurality if not majority of students are cis gandered and straight. She will still be in the majority.Anonymous wrote:DD liked Smith a lot (great school, beautiful campus, cosy feel, great town, family members have attended in earlier decades). But she is worried that as a straight cis-gendered woman she might feel out of place. (She was told that more than half of current smith students identify as LGBTQ). She is very comfortable with that community but worries that someone not part of it will have fewer social opportunistic and will feel more isolated. Can anyone with recent experience with Smith comment? DD is not by any stretch a political conservative but she is in some ways a fairly conventional kid (she is also interested in several southern schools, is possibly interested in joining a sorority, etc).
Anonymous wrote:Take with a grain of salt, but here's a thread on College Confidential in which a student says 50% of Smith students identify as queer: https://talk.collegeconfidential.com/smith-college/2111444-gay-social-scene-at-smith-college.html