art science math

<p>suggestions on colleges where i can pursue a combination of math and art for sure and science(physics and/or chemistry). it will be fantastic if colleges with varying levels of difficulty are suggested..
thank you</p>

<p>Most selective: Yale
Very selective: Brown, Williams
Selective: Wesleyan, Hamilton, Vassar, Kenyon
Less selective: Smith, Skidmore</p>

<p>momrath seems to be obsessed with smaller colleges, especially LAC's. I'm not sure what you mean by "arts", or else I could help you more. But Yale and Brown are the only top 50 math schools on that list, so I wouldn't take it all too seriously.</p>

<p>by arts i mean-fine arts(clay, plaster, oil, acrylic, pastels and the like)
Thanks</p>

<p>chibears, that was an uninformed and unnecessarily rude comment. Roja had posted earlier that she was looking at smaller schools.
Many of the schools that I list have excellent math and science departments.
PS I'm a Michigan alumna so I'm aware of what's out there.</p>

<p>Chibears, that wasn't very constructive at all.</p>

<p>As a math major at Wesleyan, I can safely say that we have a very nice math department. I'm not sure where chibears is getting his statistics from, but the professors are inspiring and the fellow classmates fascinating to work with... and there's just a friendly atmosphere with students really working together on problem sets and the like, in practice and not just admissions office promise.</p>

<p>At Wesleyan, there are no minors, so double majoring is very common, even in two very unrelated areas such as Math and Art. I know math/physics majors, math/film studies majors, math/theatre, math/history... etc. And while I'm biased and think Wesleyan is the most amazing school ever, liberal arts schools in general might be ideal if you have eclectic interests, and momrath's list seemed to suggest. Liberal arts schools tend to focus on the "all-around" education and encourage studying in several areas, not just the one that will end up being your career.</p>

<p>Similarly, if you're interested in pursuing all that in-depth, you might want to avoid schools that have core curriculums, since then you won't have much elective space to fulfill your academic interests. Cores are right for some people, but maybe not in your case.</p>