@taverngirl Clarkson was on our list for all the reasons you mentioned. We haven’t had a chance to visit, so thank you for your input.
@katliamom She visited Mines, and she loved the campus/surrounding area. However, she visited it this summer and couldn’t get a “feel” for the students or personalities. She is very studious and a hard worker. She is also outgoing and likes to be involved. She truly enjoys being challenged academically, but I also know she won’t be happy in an environment where students are so focused that they don’t (or can’t because of sheer work volume) take a break from time to time to get outside/be involved in other things. We have heard that some engineering schools/programs are like this, and we have avoided those. Wasn’t sure about Mines?
@patatty She loved WashU! She isn’t sure she can get in… You mentioned that your daughter is at Cornell which was another one on our list, but once again, not sure she can get in. These may be her “reach” schools. She hasn’t visited Cornell.
@Corbett Great info. Thank you. We haven’t thought too much about the gender ratio other than engineering tends to trend predominantly male. Aside from possibly working in her favor from an admissions standpoint, I don’t think she considers this an issue (socially?). Perhaps it is once she is in the environment?
She isn’t interested in mining–just a strong engineering school or a school that has a strong engineering program. One of the smaller schools she considered was W&L. Beautiful campus! But after visiting and talking to a few people, she wasn’t sure if the engineering program was well established (like it is at Lehigh). The school itself is reputable, but I think she was worried from an engineering standpoint and felt there may be better programs out there. (I am also paying attention to price! So applying to schools where her qualifications may help with merit or scholarship is a factor too!)
I know quite a few female students at Mines. They are engineers, so seem a little more serious than students I know at bigger public colleges but it is not like visiting a no fun zone. When there were only 10% women at mines, the fraternities would invite sororities from CU to weekend parties. All weekend, from Friday afternoon to Sunday morning. At noon on Sunday, some kind of bell rang and they went back to studying hard all week. Now that there are 30% women at mines, they don’t do that as much.
It really is a lovely school but it doesn’t offer a lot of non-STEM classes. My daughter goes to a STEM school that does offer business, psychology and a few other majors, but she doesn’t have time in her schedule to take them anyway.
Assessing a school “vibe” tends to be individual and obviously one person’s experience isn’t going to be another’s. As a whole, Mines is not known to offer a rich social/off-campus life and that is as much true as the fact that Boulder is known to be a party school. Yet obviously, students at both schools find their niche anyway, even if they are – or aren’t – partiers. That said, I know 2 male students who transferred from Mines to other schools because they thought the school was too small, too focused on STEM and STEM only and too populated by guys who spend all their free time sitting alone in dark rooms playing computer games. Last year, I met two young recent Mines grads - women - at a function in Denver. They did not enjoy their social life at Mines and said they spent most of their free time with students at Boulder and Denver. Both flat out said there were only two good things about Mines: its thorough technical education and the handsome job offer upon graduation.
Just to add…like mentioned above, the Western Reserve U was a liberal arts college that combined with Case Institute of Technology so you get the best of both worlds.