Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Unless you are Will Hunting, nearly every math department will accommodate advanced math majors. Focus on campus size, location, school type, gender ratio, everything else.
Seriously. From OP’s message, it looks like their kid has done a bit of linear/calc 3, that’s scratched the nothing surface; any college will account for that.
There was a parent who recently posted their kid finished real analysis and combo before graduating- that’s who needs additional math as they can start complex analysis, real analysis 2, graduate linear algebra starting as a freshamn
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If female, Wellesley is good.
It is sometimes annoying to my VT student that she is often one of very few females in her math classes.
If being around men - especially socially awkward men - is a problem, then math is not the field for you, lmao.
Well you can stop lyao because socially awkward is not a problem. It’s all the misogynistic, condescending, loud, entitled men that are off putting. And my DD just continues to show them up by doing more and being better, but it’s best to know that’s how math is and choose your path based on your tolerance for the daily struggle.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Unless you are Will Hunting, nearly every math department will accommodate advanced math majors. Focus on campus size, location, school type, gender ratio, everything else.
Seriously. From OP’s message, it looks like their kid has done a bit of linear/calc 3, that’s scratched the nothing surface; any college will account for that.
There was a parent who recently posted their kid finished real analysis and combo before graduating- that’s who needs additional math as they can start complex analysis, real analysis 2, graduate linear algebra starting as a freshamn
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This list includes statistics, but schools with the most alumni per capita who go on to earn a Ph.D. in math or statistics:
1. Caltech
2. Harvey Mudd
3. MIT
4. Pomona
5. Swarthmore
6. Princeton
7. Reed
8. University of Chicago
9. Carleton
10. St. Olaf
11. Grinnell
12. Williams
13. Harvard
14. Haverford
15. St. John's
16. Whitman
17. Rice
18. St. John's
19. New College of Florida
20. Wheaton
https://www.collegetransitions.com/dataverse/top-feeders-phd-programs#math
That's not the useful data column.
If your want peers who had grad school bound, you want the raw numbers, not the per
capital numbers.
#19 New College has less than one future math PhD per year. That's quite lonely.
Having peers in your program is more important than having fewer non-peers on the same campus.
Agree. Are math departments that large at any top school that it really makes much of a difference?
My kid is at Berkeley and the pure math division is not big because it is a very tough major so it is not difficult to get into classes at all.
Can you say more about class size? Can students take placement tests or talk to an advisor to place out of the basics like Multivariate and Linear Algebra?
About 100 kids major in pure math from Berkeley each year (from what I know). You can place out of MV Calc or Linear Algebra through test with advisor approval. Class sizes for most math classes are 30 to 40 except for one class which is pretty big and a pre-req for other majors as well. Hope this helps.
Anonymous wrote:Unless you are Will Hunting, nearly every math department will accommodate advanced math majors. Focus on campus size, location, school type, gender ratio, everything else.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If female, Wellesley is good.
It is sometimes annoying to my VT student that she is often one of very few females in her math classes.
If being around men - especially socially awkward men - is a problem, then math is not the field for you, lmao.
Well you can stop lyao because socially awkward is not a problem. It’s all the misogynistic, condescending, loud, entitled men that are off putting. And my DD just continues to show them up by doing more and being better, but it’s best to know that’s how math is and choose your path based on your tolerance for the daily struggle.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Why not try for Oxford / Cambridge / Imperial. They will not care one iota about the Humanities.
Cambridge is the top. The Brits say the kids who don’t think they will get into Cambridge for math go for Oxford.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If female, Wellesley is good.
It is sometimes annoying to my VT student that she is often one of very few females in her math classes.
If being around men - especially socially awkward men - is a problem, then math is not the field for you, lmao.
Well you can stop lyao because socially awkward is not a problem. It’s all the misogynistic, condescending, loud, entitled men that are off putting. And my DD just continues to show them up by doing more and being better, but it’s best to know that’s how math is and choose your path based on your tolerance for the daily struggle.
Not sure where your daughter is but this is not math culture at all in my experience.
Anonymous wrote:“#19 New College has less than one future math PhD per year. That's quite lonely.”
This is what I was referring to about data nonsense.
Anonymous wrote:Why not try for Oxford / Cambridge / Imperial. They will not care one iota about the Humanities.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If female, Wellesley is good.
It is sometimes annoying to my VT student that she is often one of very few females in her math classes.
If being around men - especially socially awkward men - is a problem, then math is not the field for you, lmao.
Well you can stop lyao because socially awkward is not a problem. It’s all the misogynistic, condescending, loud, entitled men that are off putting. And my DD just continues to show them up by doing more and being better, but it’s best to know that’s how math is and choose your path based on your tolerance for the daily struggle.