Anonymous wrote:For all-female colleges that have easy access to more diverse student bodies, I'd also consider Smith (part of the Five college consortium and in Northhampton, which is a very beautiful small city), Mt. Holyoke (part of the same consortium, but in a small town nearby ), Bryn Mawr (in a Philadelphia suburb, with cross-registration available at Haverford and Swarthmore), and Scripps (part of different college consortium located in Claremont, California). Although Wellesley is arguably slightly more prestigious than those, I think I'd prefer all of those to Wellesley because of the nearby college communities.
Anonymous wrote:WTH is a gender studies major?
Anonymous wrote:I'll keep this short. DD is a sophomore at an Ivy. Was assaulted and stalked her freshman year for five brutal and traumatizing months. Is miserable at the current school she's at and wants to leave. Has a 3.7 as a gender studies major. Where can she transfer to? Ideally, she wants to go to another Ivy (except Cornell or Penn because she hates those schools), but I feel like her GPA might prevent her from transferring to another Ivy. Other schools on her list are Wesleyan, Vassar, Barnard, Northwestern, and Stanford (I know, long shot). I've never been through this... Help!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My sophomore wants to transfer too. She loved her school until March, but they only let freshmen back on campus and after 6 months at home with no end in sight she has fallen out of love and feels zero connection to her school. I don’t think colleges realize how irrelevant they become when students are stuck at home taking classes online.
I might try to encourage her to wait before making a decision.
No school is great from home/online.
Given the hassle of transferring (and possible expense), can she hold out for this year (which is aberrant??)
a year is a third of a college education. Any student in college right now is being entirely screwed out of both an education and the best years of their life
My student is fine to be advancing toward their degree while not having to pay r&b. That is such a huge discount and I can’t believe people aren’t happy about it.
R & B isn’t a discount if you can’t partake in the service anyway. Maybe as a freshman, where you have to stay on campus sure. But in most cases freshman are still the only class allowed to stay on campus.
Juniors on up still have to pay fees associated with being on campus, though not Room and Board, but only freshman can use it!
Some hell of a discount!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My sophomore wants to transfer too. She loved her school until March, but they only let freshmen back on campus and after 6 months at home with no end in sight she has fallen out of love and feels zero connection to her school. I don’t think colleges realize how irrelevant they become when students are stuck at home taking classes online.
I might try to encourage her to wait before making a decision.
No school is great from home/online.
Given the hassle of transferring (and possible expense), can she hold out for this year (which is aberrant??)
a year is a third of a college education. Any student in college right now is being entirely screwed out of both an education and the best years of their life
My student is fine to be advancing toward their degree while not having to pay r&b. That is such a huge discount and I can’t believe people aren’t happy about it.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I'll keep this short. DD is a sophomore at an Ivy. Was assaulted and stalked her freshman year for five brutal and traumatizing months. Is miserable at the current school she's at and wants to leave. Has a 3.7 as a gender studies major. Where can she transfer to? Ideally, she wants to go to another Ivy (except Cornell or Penn because she hates those schools), but I feel like her GPA might prevent her from transferring to another Ivy. Other schools on her list are Wesleyan, Vassar, Barnard, Northwestern, and Stanford (I know, long shot). I've never been through this... Help!
My son did the same was at Princeton and ended up going to Harvard from where he graduated 2 years ago (despite his dad and I attending P, and being disappointed he didn't to stay, it was the right decision to switch). I would think with Covid, it could be to your advantage to transfer to her school of choice. A 3.7 is perfectly respectable in a top ivy.
If you think she has given it a really fair shot, and she is truly that unhappy I say get your apps in asap.I would be mindful as to how you explain why she wants to transfer. You do not want to have the school look at her as someone who does not adjust well/easily. I say this from the perspective of a sister in law who is a head admissions counselor at a top university (non ivy). Good luck either way!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I find this confusing. Aren’t all ivys offering full remote for the next year? Can she not just move home and do remote for a year from home, while keeping her financial aid package?
Best answer yet. Especially since OP is looking for a unicorn (ivy paying her DD to attend).
Anonymous wrote:I find this confusing. Aren’t all ivys offering full remote for the next year? Can she not just move home and do remote for a year from home, while keeping her financial aid package?
Anonymous wrote:WTH is a gender studies major?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My sophomore wants to transfer too. She loved her school until March, but they only let freshmen back on campus and after 6 months at home with no end in sight she has fallen out of love and feels zero connection to her school. I don’t think colleges realize how irrelevant they become when students are stuck at home taking classes online.
I might try to encourage her to wait before making a decision.
No school is great from home/online.
Given the hassle of transferring (and possible expense), can she hold out for this year (which is aberrant??)
a year is a third of a college education. Any student in college right now is being entirely screwed out of both an education and the best years of their life
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My sophomore wants to transfer too. She loved her school until March, but they only let freshmen back on campus and after 6 months at home with no end in sight she has fallen out of love and feels zero connection to her school. I don’t think colleges realize how irrelevant they become when students are stuck at home taking classes online.
I might try to encourage her to wait before making a decision.
No school is great from home/online.
Given the hassle of transferring (and possible expense), can she hold out for this year (which is aberrant??)
a year is a third of a college education. Any student in college right now is being entirely screwed out of both an education and the best years of their life