<p>(Repost from a thread a year or two ago on the same topic, which also included Pomona College.)</p>
<p>D is Amherst 09, S is Williams 11. Mom and Dad (yours truly) are Pomona alumni.</p>
<h1>1. Go visit, preferably overnight. You will know better then.</h1>
<h1>2. Amherst and Williams are sibling schools with a healthy rivalry, but with great mutual respect. They are very similar in almost all respects. Williams has 25% larger student body, and the course offerings are correspondingly a little wider and deeper, particularly in the sciences. Art history is a standout at Williams.</h1>
<h1>3. Williamstown is small town/village. Three blocks of Spring St and Water St with small shops and a dozen places to eat is all there is within walking distance of the college. If you have a car or a bicycle, there is a Stop & Shop about 2 miles from campus, and North Adams about 5 miles away. There is bus service.</h1>
<p>Amherst the town is a small college town with several blocks of various shops and restaurants. The town also draws students from U Mass Amherst (about 20000 students). Hadley, just west of Amherst, is mall city. Northhampton and Smith College are 9 miles from Amherst, but Route 9 can be slow, driving past the Target, Wal Mart, Whole Foods, Best Buy…no cutesy awards there, but D loves being able to go to Trader Joe’s and Target on her bicycle. Can’t do that from Williams.</p>
<h1>4. You can take courses at Smith, Mt. Holyoke, Hampshire, U Mass Amherst, but the bus commute can be more time consuming than ideal. No Italian at Amherst College, so daughter took courses at Smith and Mt. Holyoke.</h1>
<h1>5. Pomona shares the attributes of Amherst and Williams, but with So Calif weather, a seemingly more low key but no less academically talented student body, and a contiguous 5 college system that you can use without thinking about the commute time.</h1>
<p>It would be a great thing to have such a choice!</p>