Anonymous wrote:HS junior and already conservative? People usually get more conservative as they age so this kid is on what is scientifically known as a "Miller trajectory", lol. Is he already balding?
Anonymous wrote:Many colleges encourage a range of political views and would love to have students with conservative perspectives. The big problem at the moment is that one political party has embraced a gangster who tried to overthrow the government, so, while conservative viewpoints may be respected in discussions at my kids Ivy, there isn't a lot of tolerance for the dictator wannabe who is our current president.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If you go into college with such a closed mind, you’re not really there for the education. Does want to be challenged to think, or does he want validation?
Do you ask the same question whenever a poster seeks colleges for their very liberal kid?
Anonymous wrote:We're moderates and think any regular college is fine, OP. It's only if you're an extreme right-winger that you'd have any problems.
Anonymous wrote:Holy cross might work. While it does lean liberal, it has a decent conservative presence and students are known to be accepting of all views and values. Very inclusive community
Anonymous wrote:BU
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If you go into college with such a closed mind, you’re not really there for the education. Does want to be challenged to think, or does he want validation?
Do you ask the same question whenever a poster seeks colleges for their very liberal kid?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Hampden-Sydney, Randolph Macon, University of Richmond, Roanoke College, VMI.
Most any smaller private school in the southeast.
Hunt: it's not the college or the professors that make a school more conservative, it's your fellow students and their parents.
Anonymous wrote:If you go into college with such a closed mind, you’re not really there for the education. Does want to be challenged to think, or does he want validation?