Anonymous wrote:Carleton College in Minnesota might be a fit for your daughter.
Anonymous wrote:Can someone explain more specifically why W&M is a good fit for a "nerdy" student? Is it just because the population tends to be highly studious? Or are there other factors?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Can someone explain more specifically why W&M is a good fit for a "nerdy" student? Is it just because the population tends to be highly studious? Or are there other factors?
It is a combination of very bright students plus a love for learning and an intellectually vibrant culture: it is "cool" to like your classes and want to learn. It is cool to study, cool to be involved in research or on-campus intellectual clubs. It is called the quintessential public ivy for a reason: lots of small seminar classes where students participate, engaged approachable professors, intellectual vitality prominent in the culture, etc: just like the ivies. But with slightly less selective admissions. The general personality of the majority of WM students overlaps highly with the personalities at the Uchicago and most ivies: ie nerd-forward but fun too.
Anonymous wrote:Another vote for Case Western. This is exactly the profile of kids there. Good, smart sciency kids, not into partying.
Anonymous wrote:RICE.
Fantastic research opportunities, beautiful campus, nice & nerdy kids, residential colleges that foster community, happy students.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Highly recommend Smith if she is willing to go to an all-women's college. She sounds like my DD, who is a Smithie and found it to be a perfect fit. Has done a lot of research and even published in STEM.
Another Smithie parent, I agree.
Also W&M, Mt Holyoke, RIT
SMCM for a safety
Anonymous wrote:My science and music son applied to Carleton, Macalester, St Olaf, Lawrence along with UVA and W&M. He is at W&M and having a great experience with science and extracurricular music and has made close friends.
Anonymous wrote:DD is bright (NMCS) but didn’t want to go to a college that was cut-throat or too competitive. She also didn’t want to be the smartest one there. Didn’t care about US News rankings or sports. Ended up at Oberlin with merit and it is an absolute perfect fit. And there is music everywhere you turn!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Can someone explain more specifically why W&M is a good fit for a "nerdy" student? Is it just because the population tends to be highly studious? Or are there other factors?
It is a combination of very bright students plus a love for learning and an intellectually vibrant culture: it is "cool" to like your classes and want to learn. It is cool to study, cool to be involved in research or on-campus intellectual clubs. It is called the quintessential public ivy for a reason: lots of small seminar classes where students participate, engaged approachable professors, intellectual vitality prominent in the culture, etc: just like the ivies. But with slightly less selective admissions. The general personality of the majority of WM students overlaps highly with the personalities at the Uchicago and most ivies: ie nerd-forward but fun too.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Virginia Tech. My kid is a total quiet nerd and she found her other nerds in the LLC at tech. She loves the community, the fact that they go hiking and are excited to talk math/physics all the time. She also has found out how much fun life can be when you all dress in orange and yell for your football team. It’s her people and she loves it and we totally thought she’d be a W&M kid or a SLAC kid, but we were wrong.
To apply for, for instance, the Hypatia LLC requires ideological commitment. Read their application.
First, you are required to identify your gender (male/female/non-binary/other - where "other" means you have to specify what you identify as - it's a required question so you can't refuse to answer it).
Second, it asks Why do you want to be part of Hypatia? What unique perspective, background, or set of experiences will you bring to the Hypatia community? Hypatia has long recognized the importance of building a diverse community. How will your life experiences enable you to contribute to the Hypatia community? Essay must be at least 300 words in length but no more than 500 words.
So basically your kid will have to start their professional life with a DEI statement.