I am currently a junior in search of a good college. I’m mainly looking in the South/Midwest since that’s where I live. I do have high test scores: a 35 ACT score and a 1510 on the new SAT. I’ve also consistently gotten As throughout high school. However, I want to go to a college where I can still fun and not always be studying. Do you all have any recommendations?
For reference, the colleges that I am currently interested are Washington University in St. Louis, Vanderbilt University, and Rice University. Rhodes College and the University of Tulsa are my backup schools.
Thanks for the suggestion inthegarden! Tulane has actually been on my radar. I’m not hugely into frats/parties, and I’m not sure if I would enjoy living in New Orleans or not. I’ll do some more research though!
I’m not sure what it’s like to be an undergrad at Tulane (i.e. the greek situation) as I was there as an older grad student, and the “kids” were not really on my radar. I’ve never been much of a drinker/partier etiher. But there’s something very fascinating about New Orleans and I love it and miss it. There are layers and layers of culture unique in all the world. If you get a chance, go visit, and maybe do an overnight in a dorm. Also, keep in mind that New Orleans is much more than the touristy French Quarter that gets so much attention. Tulane is set in beautiful Uptown, a somewhat more placid area near tree-lined St. Charles Avenue and Audoban Park.
Also, students come to Tulane from all over the US and world. Even if there are a lot of frats (I never really noticed that aspect too much TBH as a grad student) it would not all be the typical Southern frat scene, I would think, and many progressive/more intellectual people are there too.
@Publisher Sure! Here are some more things I am looking for.
Small-mid size. The smallest I would go is about 2k undergrads and the largest would be about 10k undergrads.
I would prefer to live on-campus.
I like schools in/near a large city. Not a huge fan of college towns.
Greek life shouldn't be too big there.
I lean left politically, so I would rather not go to a super conservative school. I'm pretty flexible though.
Warm weather --- not a fan of the cold!
I prefer the South/Midwest, because I want to stay somewhat close to home. I don’t want to reveal exactly where I live right now for privacy reasons, but anything in those regions probably works for me.
Your situation sounds a bit like my son’s(although he doesn’t have your scores). Are you interested in any schools in Virginia or NC? With an interest in poli sci, there are several good choices in VA/DC area: Georgetown, UVA (a little big), Wake Forest or Elon in NC.
@Jamrock411 Thanks for the suggestion! It may be a bit big for me though.
@suzy100 All of it, although I have to pay for law school myself depending on how expensive the college is.
@TS0104 UVA and UNC are both great schools, but both are a bit too big for me. Georgetown sounds really cool, although I’m a bit nervous about living in DC in this current political climate. Wake Forest and Elon seem kinda waspy too.
Sorry if it seems like I am picky. I’m just trying to make sure I find the right pick.
@ShoutTurkey, you said you lean left…DC tends to lean left (regardless of who is in charge of the government) though I don’t know about Georgetown itself…
At the risk of bringing up the obvious: You need to run the NPC on each of the schools that you are considering, and show the results to your parents. “Top 20%” does not make it easy to pay for university.