Amherst v. Cornell v. Dartmouth v. G'town v. JHU v. Midd v. UPenn vs. W&L v. Williams

<p>Okay, I applied to a boatload of schools, not thinking I’d get accepted to any. And I didn’t visit most of the schools, except the ones closest to home (Georgetown, GW, JHU). I was wondering if people could tell me the good things/bad things about each of the schools I list below. (I got accepted to a total of 13 schools, applied to 18. The ones listed below are the ones I narrowed down to.) </p>

<p>Just a few things about me: I’m going to major in English, with emphasis on creative writing. I don’t like Greek life because people then tend to be cliquey, but if the community isn’t cliquey, I am okay with Greek life. I might even join a sorority. I also really like the New England area, and I don’t like being in a place with lots and lots of people. </p>

<p>My parents want me to attend an Ivy League because I got into three. I don’t like the choices I have though. </p>

<p>Amherst: I really like Amherst because I like smaller schools, and I heard it does not have much of Greek life. </p>

<p>Cornell: I don’t like Greek life, and it’s a big thing on campus. But I like the fact it is in a small town.</p>

<p>Dartmouth: I don’t like Greek life, and it’s a big thing on campus. But I always liked Dartmouth because it’s a small community. Since it’s rural though, it might be hard for me to go there from D.C. </p>

<p>Georgetown: I’m not going to Georgetown, I don’t think, because I live in D.C. Plus, I already attended it for this year, and people are very cliquish. </p>

<p>Haverford: I don’t think I’ll go to Haverford, they only gave me a little bit of financial aid. </p>

<p>JHU: I don’t think I’ll go to JHU but this can change. They’re going to make me take out a loan, but I might be able to negotiate with them. I stayed on campus about two years ago, and I didn’t really like it. Plus it has a lot of people. </p>

<p>Middlebury: I really like Midd because it has like a ski slope on campus and I love skiing. </p>

<p>UPenn: My parents want me to go to Penn because it’s like less than 3 hours from home. But even though I’m from D.C., I don’t like big cities, and Penn is in one. But if I go, which is the best college house? I don’t like the high rises that much. They remind me of apartment buildings </p>

<p>Washington and Lee: I got a full ride here, and I used to really like it until I recognized that the school was named after a Confederate. Plus, I don’t like the south and I heard they have Greek life, and people tend to be cliquish. </p>

<p>Wesleyan: I like Wes. </p>

<p>Williams: Williams (see Amherst.)</p>

<p>Dartmouth’s greek life is unique - its much more open than most places. People are invited to every party, its not that cliquey, no “lists”, etc. Its much less cliquey than even Penn or Cornell in this regard.</p>

<p>I would pick Dartmouth or Amherst personally. I would rule out W&L totally.</p>

<p>Uhhh you applied to 18 schools?</p>

<p>First of all, I commend you for following through with 18 applications. These days you need to do that go get good offers. </p>

<p>Now to your choices. I would decide between Williams, Amherst, Dartmouth, Cornell and Penn.</p>

<p>As for the LAC’s I think they are dead even you just have to choose. Somehow I think you might find Amherst more to your liking just based on the tone of your responses. I can’t really pinpoint why, I just get that sense.</p>

<p>If you do not opt for an LAC, I think you can find what you are looking for at Dartmouth. I don’t think it is as frat party oriented as Cornell, although I think there are enough groups to stay away from that at Cornell. At the end of the day though, I think I agree with the folks :slight_smile: Penn</p>

<p>have you considered Dartmouth’s quarterly system? Though many people appreciate the leg up it gives when the time arrives to apply for internships, it has a huge effect on the the social scene, and the fact that it hasn’t been widely copied probably says something.</p>

<p>I would just go to penn. It is by far the best school on your list. if you don’t like the high rises, you can still have the traditional college freshman experience in one of the dorms in quad.
penn is in a city, but the campus is still very greeny, beautiful architecture, lots of open spaces, etc</p>

<p>I have a feeling you’d like Midd a lot, check out their Bread Loaf School of English.
You seem like an LAC kind of person. If it were up to me, its between Dartmouth, Amherst, Williams and Midd.</p>

<p>If you’re into English/creative writing, check this out:</p>

<p><a href=“http://www.nytimes.com/2007/12/05/education/05writers.html?pagewanted=all[/url]”>http://www.nytimes.com/2007/12/05/education/05writers.html?pagewanted=all&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/p&gt;

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<p>my mom wants me to go to penn, so i think i might end up going there. i visited it yesterday, and to be honest, some of it looked kind of run down. i went into the zoology building and it looked terrible. but i liked the people. everyone was very nice (georgetown is just the opposite). im visiting cornell next monday, so i will see how that goes.</p>

<p>I would seriously consider Amherst or Williams (depends which you like more). It has no greek life, it is not in a city, the town is beautiful & interesting, and the quality of education is unbeatable (& personal) </p>

<p>I would also look into Wesleyan simply because I love Wesleyan…but I think Amherst tops it. </p>

<p>Tell your parents you can go to an Ivy League school for graduate school…</p>

<p>Plus your intro about yourself makes me wonder why you applied to places like Dartmouth & Cornell – they are so the opposite of basically everything you mentioned it seems. (Nothing against them – just there are different schools for different people)</p>

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<p>Considering there are more than twice as many Cornell students not in frats as there are total students at Dartmouth, I suspect you may need to rethink your argument.</p>

<p>When visiting Cornell, you may want to check out Risley Hall:</p>

<p>[Risley</a> Residential College - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia](<a href=“http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Risley_Residential_College]Risley”>Risley Residential College - Wikipedia)</p>

<p>As for lack of clique-ness, Amherst may be your best bet. The thing about college is that it is very hard to avoid cliques.</p>

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<p>Right. Amherst and Cornell and Dartmouth and Middlebury just suck.</p>

<p>^^ In the future, please don’t group Amherst and Cornell together. ;-)</p>

<p>lol, this is why I try to be modest and objective when I praise my school now.</p>

<p>From what you’ve said, I’d say you should choose from Amherst, Williams, Midd, and Wes. If I were you, of the four I would choose Amherst: small, personal school, small (but very nice) town, and no Greek life. And if your parents still push for an Ivy, tell them that the education and prestige (for those who know) of Amherst and Williams is equal to that of any Ivy on your list.</p>

<p>Also, you should just exclude Gtown, Haverford, and JHU from your list completely… why keep them if you don’t want to go? I’d also cross off WL, unless financials are important.</p>

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<p>Fair enough. I’ll be certain to place the revolutionary university that has played a unique role in American history in its own category.</p>

<p>Thinking about it. I kind of like Wes for the OP.</p>

<p>“From what you’ve said, I’d say you should choose from Amherst, Williams, Midd, and Wes.”</p>

<p>Agreed. There’s no reason to go to Penn/Cornell/Dartmouth just because you got in. It’s very clearly not what you want. You have the creme de la creme of small town LACs. Pick the one you like best and don’t look back.</p>

<p>pliverpool, I strongly recommend you visit Middlebury. Preferably, with your Mother. The campus is gorgeous. The facilities are first rate. Their new library, for example, is one of the nicest you are likely to see at any college. They take special pride in their writing programs (along with their foreign language programs). Yes, they do have their own ski area nearby.</p>

<p>UPenn, compared to other prestigious universities, suffers from a relatively low endowment per student. That may account for the run-down appearance you observed. Middlebury, in contrast, has the appearance of a very well funded operation. </p>

<p>Each of these schools has something in particular going for it. Amherst, for example, does have the advantage of the 5-college consortium. However, from what you say about yourself, Middlebury sounds like it might be the best fit as long as you feel comfortable with the students you meet there, and you are o.k. with the long cold winters in a small New England town.</p>