Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We are fed pro-diversity views & images 24/7. Maybe some people actually believe all this diversity hype, & think you need all kinds of people around you to have a well-rounded education?
So, the Russian (or Chinese? Or Republican?) bot goofed.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Went to MIT and met very few Wellesley girls that I liked. Stuck up Hilary Clinton was definitely the vibe.
Somehow, I suspect that your own condescension (Wellesley *girls*?) had more to do with the lack of chemistry between you and the Wellesley students you met and less to do with what you perceived as their apparent "vibe."
+1
Agree. VERY familiar with both camps. Wellesley and MIT are NOT at odds with each other. Both genders of both schools can hold their own, and are not generally at odds.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It’s radically left and woke. The town is boring. It’s an extremely non traditional college experience.
Cool. Enjoy your "education" at Liberty. LOL.
Well they’re not wrong…
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I will be blunt. My girls are not gay and want to be around guys so they will not look at AWC.
You are gross.
How is it gross? PP stated it is 40% gay or bi. It is also 100% women. My daughters would like to attend school, date, live in dorms with and socialize with men as much as possible during their college years. How is that gross? Let me guess, you are gay and find men gross. Got it.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I will be blunt. My girls are not gay and want to be around guys so they will not look at AWC.
You are gross.
Anonymous wrote:Wellesley consistently ranks in the top 5 among the US News LAC rankings but I hear about it for less than the others.
It seems like a great school- urban location, access to MIT/Olin/Babson, tons of opportunites, great alumnae network. I understand that being a women's college means less interest but it still receives roughly 75% of the applications of similarly ranked coed school.
Anonymous wrote:Wellesley Wellesley, only to be there!
I went there and was pretty social at MIT and nearby schools, but nowhere near anything like my kids had at bigger coed schools. Still, if you want a great education and a lifelong network of sisters, it’s a wonderful place.
If you visit and love the vibe, it should work out for you. If you pick it for ratings or because you don’t get into an Ivy, or because your dad wants you to go, I don’t recommend it.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Went to MIT and met very few Wellesley girls that I liked. Stuck up Hilary Clinton was definitely the vibe.
Somehow, I suspect that your own condescension (Wellesley *girls*?) had more to do with the lack of chemistry between you and the Wellesley students you met and less to do with what you perceived as their apparent "vibe."
Anonymous wrote:Went to MIT and met very few Wellesley girls that I liked. Stuck up Hilary Clinton was definitely the vibe.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It’s radically left and woke. The town is boring. It’s an extremely non traditional college experience.
Cool. Enjoy your "education" at Liberty. LOL.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Wellesley consistently ranks in the top 5 among the US News LAC rankings but I hear about it for less than the others.
It seems like a great school- urban location, access to MIT/Olin/Babson, tons of opportunites, great alumnae network. I understand that being a women's college means less interest but it still receives roughly 75% of the applications of similarly ranked coed school.
You have your answer right there. Less interest and no male applicants = reduced chatter.
To judge by some of the posts on this site, including ones in this very thread, as well as media beyond this site, I'd argue that a certain misogyny also partially accounts for the comparative lack of attention that Wellesley receives.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Wellesley consistently ranks in the top 5 among the US News LAC rankings but I hear about it for less than the others.
It seems like a great school- urban location, access to MIT/Olin/Babson, tons of opportunites, great alumnae network. I understand that being a women's college means less interest but it still receives roughly 75% of the applications of similarly ranked coed school.
You have your answer right there. Less interest and no male applicants = reduced chatter.
To judge by some of the posts on this site, including ones in this very thread, as well as media beyond this site, I'd argue that a certain misogyny also partially accounts for the comparative lack of attention that Wellesley receives.