Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I'm surprised as well. We visited a couple of years ago and it just didn't feel like a highly academic atmosphere. It felt pre-professional - which may be fine for people, of course, but it didn't have that feel of a high selective liberal arts college.
Yes it is well known as a second-tier safety school. Not worth the money.
+1
It will take a few decades to catch to what OP wants it to be.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I'm surprised as well. We visited a couple of years ago and it just didn't feel like a highly academic atmosphere. It felt pre-professional - which may be fine for people, of course, but it didn't have that feel of a high selective liberal arts college.
Yes it is well known as a second-tier safety school. Not worth the money.
Anonymous wrote:It's a small sample size, but most of the Dennison grads I know went into public service or academia. Maybe they are atypical but don't assume that everyone there wants to become a doctor or banker.
For options similar to Dennison but possibly a little less pre-peofessional, you could check out Wooster, Kalamazoo, Lawrence, and Beloit. You can read about colleges of that size and selectivity level on CTCL.org.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What? Where did this come from? Wasn't it well over 50% not that long ago? Does Steve Carell add that much cachet to their alumni pool?
That's lower than W&M.
https://denison.edu/campus/about/fast-facts
W&M is not a slac.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I'm surprised as well. We visited a couple of years ago and it just didn't feel like a highly academic atmosphere. It felt pre-professional - which may be fine for people, of course, but it didn't have that feel of a high selective liberal arts college.
Yes it is well known as a second-tier safety school. Not worth the money.
It’s not a safety school if the acceptance rate is 29%.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I'm surprised as well. We visited a couple of years ago and it just didn't feel like a highly academic atmosphere. It felt pre-professional - which may be fine for people, of course, but it didn't have that feel of a high selective liberal arts college.
Yes it is well known as a second-tier safety school. Not worth the money.
Anonymous wrote:One thing that bugs me about Denison is that I can never find their Common Data Set! Most universities post it on their website. But Denison has only these fancy infographic data points with no explanation of how they are calculating those things. The Common Data Set is where you can see the true, consistent, auditable information. The infographics often use cherry-picked ways to represent the data (like from an alumni survey with a 20% response rate, or a very generous view on "being employed" where a PT job not in your field would count). Also, Denison does yield protection.
I don't hold these things against them--it's smart marketing if people aren't aware of it--but it personally annoys me. (I do like Denison though and my DS considered it).