<p>Any suggestions? Thanks!</p>
<p>Dartmouth, Princeton, Rice, Caltech.</p>
<p>Adding to the list:</p>
<p>Brandeis University
Case Western Reserve University
Johns Hopkins University
Tufts University
University of Rochester
Wake Forest University</p>
<p>Keep in mind that smaller universities do NOT necessarily have smaller classes or more opportunities per student.</p>
<p>I would second Rice.</p>
<p>I came to this thread planning to suggest Rice, too. Thirded.</p>
<p>Rice and Duke, but Duke is a bit larger.</p>
<p>Wake Forest University is a liberal arts school.</p>
<p>When you say “liberal arts,” what do you mean? Almost all of the universities mentioned would describe themselves, or be labeled, as following a liberal arts paradigm of education - indeed, the majority of universities and colleges in the U.S. do. A “liberal arts education” usually denotes “a curriculum that imparts general knowledge and develops the student’s rational thought and intellectual capabilities.”</p>
<p>Or do you just mean to exclude small liberal arts colleges like Bowdoin, Swarthmore, Amherst, Wellesley, etc?</p>