Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Continuing:
If Williams College was listed among National Universities, it probably would be ranked about #30 to #40. Georgia Tech, U Virginia, UNC, UCLA, Rice, etc. are more prestigious and certainly have better name recognition.
Once outside the snobby Northeast US bubble, reality sets in and LACs prestige diminishes greatly.
Nevertheless, both are solid schools which prepare students well for grad school.
You are conflating name recognition based on size and sports with prestige. Williams is much more prestigious than any of the schools you've mentioned with the possible exception of Rice.
Prestige really is based on the views of those familiar with all the relevant facts, not the reponses to a Gallup poll.
Anonymous wrote:Continuing:
If Williams College was listed among National Universities, it probably would be ranked about #30 to #40. Georgia Tech, U Virginia, UNC, UCLA, Rice, etc. are more prestigious and certainly have better name recognition.
Once outside the snobby Northeast US bubble, reality sets in and LACs prestige diminishes greatly.
Nevertheless, both are solid schools which prepare students well for grad school.
Anonymous wrote:To me, knowing the differences between Bowdoin and Williams (the differences are pretty tiny) is a sign of cultural literacy. It is a sign of mixing in elite circles.
There is nothing wrong with not knowing this. Most people don't. But if you are someone who manages to make the leap from a random state school to an elite law school but then go interview at elite law firms and don't know what these liberal arts colleges are that many partners attended, it will hurt you.
I know I sound like a snob.
Anonymous wrote:To me, knowing the differences between Bowdoin and Williams (the differences are pretty tiny) is a sign of cultural literacy. It is a sign of mixing in elite circles.
There is nothing wrong with not knowing this. Most people don't. But if you are someone who manages to make the leap from a random state school to an elite law school but then go interview at elite law firms and don't know what these liberal arts colleges are that many partners attended, it will hurt you.
I know I sound like a snob.
Anonymous wrote:Among older people, Williams tends to resonate more. Among younger people, Bowdoin probably has the edge these days - at least in terms of desirability. But the reality is that 99 percent of people on Earth have never heard of either school.
Anonymous wrote:Williams is much better known. It’s also particularly good for math, which Bowdoin is not.
Anonymous wrote:Williams is much better known. It’s also particularly good for math, which Bowdoin is not.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Being consistently ranked #1 LAC is meaningful. Williams has far better name recognition than Bowdoin, presumably for this reason. We visited both and though we were very impressed by Williams' academics, DC found the vibe a little snobbish and not so friendly. Decided to go in a different WASP direction ultimately. Loved the Bowdoin visit, all positives there.
I think it's important for a kid to pick where he feels he will be happy and thrive across the board. The specific academic differences are not really at that meaningful.
Does Williams really have better name recognition that Bowdoin? I'm not sure that I would agree with that. Bowdoin is a pretty unique name and I think many have heard of it even if they don't quite understand it's high position among elite SLACs.
The top 4 NESCAC schools (Amherst, Bowdoin, Middlebury, and Williams) have student populations which are virtually identical in terms of academic profiles.
In terms of Wall Street and Consulting recruiting Bowdoin does have some success but the other three are considerably more successful with Williams and Amherst traditionally leading the group. Over the past few years Middlebury has passed Amherst and is now close to Williams likely because of the success of Ted Pick at MS and John Waldron at GS.
A student cannot go wrong with any of these schools and they should decide based on where they see themselves happiest for the next four years. If that place is Bowdoin they are giving up nothing by attending Bowdoin provided that IB and MBB aren't their goals.