Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This is a good topic, but it does make me think of this SNL character who sees things... a little differently and I'm sure must have Oberlin in his backstory!
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Anonymous wrote:This is a good topic, but it does make me think of this SNL character who sees things... a little differently and I'm sure must have Oberlin in his backstory!
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Anonymous wrote:Is Kenyon strong in English outside of creative writing?
Anonymous wrote:Wesleyan, Bard, Oberlin
Thanks for the additional suggestions! My DD is a HS sophomore and completely the smart, quirky, blue hair, questionable hygiene - weird activity type who wants to be a poet.
The irony is I was a straight laced sorority girl, president of every activity, business major type (Still am...). These schools would have been my worst nightmare when I was 18. I remember begging my mom to leave the tours of Bard and Wesleyan after 15 minutes...
Anonymous wrote:Oberlin was a no for my child after they hired Mahallati, let alone the bakery debacle. Glad your kids felt it was a positive experience learning about the school.
Anonymous wrote:Forget Oberlin and any other get-over-yourselves-rich-kids college, try a school like Berea College in Kentucky. You're going to find some *truly* interesting students there.
Anonymous wrote:FIT by a mile!!! My friends sister went there, we got invited to her loft in NYC and all her Fashion Institute of Technology friends were super eclectic and interesting
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I sat through a Bates, Davidson, Occidental, Oberlin session w/ DD a couple of weeks ago. Bates was Very generic. Davidson was very, very into the fact that they have all D1 sports (very not my kid), and Occidental thinks it’s a good idea to call themselves Oxy (WTAF?!? Has no one clued them in?).
Oberlin said they were looking to recruit blue haired kids. Not kids who actually have blue hair, the Ad Rep clarified, but the sort of smart, artsy, different from the crowd, think outside the box kids who might have blue (purple, pink, hair). . A couple of older DS’s friends are there, love it, and that’s a fair assessment. Super smart, not preppy, not jocks. Outside the box kids. Very kind.
DS just graduated from Grinnell and, like its competitor colleges, it is definitely big on the red plaid, white skin, blue hair kid who thinks they are edgy and artsy.
Yes I'm all for people dying their hair any color they want. But I notice when I drive by our local art college that pretty much EVERYBODY had blue/pink/purple hair. It's hardly a marker of somebody breaking from the norm among creative types. I'm surprised that a school like Oberlin landed on that as their pitch.
And I"m LOLing and the red/white/blue Grinnell thing