Here's What I Want for a School... Reccomendations?

<p>If your friend is considering women’s colleges, I encourage her to look at Smith College. Smith has a wonderful supportive, caring sense of community. It’s known for academic excellence and small classes. Students are provided with terrific advising and mentoring and available, committed professors. </p>

<p>Smith is part of a 5-college consortium (with Amherst, Hampshire, Mt. Holyoke and Univ Mass). You can take classes at any. There is a free shuttle bus to get to classes at the other campuses.</p>

<p>Here are some facts: <a href="http://www.smith.edu/collegerelations/SpeakingofSmith-0414.pdf%5B/url%5D"&gt;http://www.smith.edu/collegerelations/SpeakingofSmith-0414.pdf&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/p>

<p>Rice...maybe Brown or Emory.</p>

<p>Rice, Brown, Northwestern, WashU.</p>

<p>We can list out a billion colleges and universities for you.</p>

<p>rather than to sith through this yourself, Why not gives us more information about her plans, her extracurricular interest, more detail about herself so we can give her more precise schools to choose from??</p>

<p>What she intends to do as a career choice or field interest is an excellent way to start. You gotta be leaning towards something....</p>

<p>Got any more info?</p>

<p>University of Miami, BC, Emory, maybe Columbia...</p>

<p>Santa Clara University is another option.</p>

<p>Chicago; Nwestern, UChicago
LA: UCLA, USC
Houston: Rice
NYC: NYU, Columbia
Boston: BU, BC
Miami: UMiami
Atlanta: Emory, GT
Pittsburgh: UPitt
Philadelphia: UPenn, Drexel
DC: American, Gtown, GWU</p>

<p>USC for sure.</p>

<p>Stats or interests would help.</p>

<p>I'd second the recommendation for Loyola Chicago. Not a top college, but it's a good college. Strong academics, but that competitive (except among premeds). Residential area of Chicago. Relaxing atmosphere with a small pretty campus and small classrooms. People stress over internships and fill the library and party Thursday through Sunday. Prestigious in the Midwest. Numerous professional and liberal arts majors. Light general education requirements allows many to double major or triple minor. You can also study at their very own Rome campus for nothing more per semester than air fare.</p>

<p>Fordham might be a good safety--she could choose between the Rose Hill and Lincoln Center campuses. BC and Wellesley might be good matches, depending on how far outside of the city she's willing to venture, as Boston is accessible by public transport from both.</p>

<p>On the reach side, Brown fits that description pretty well, and her stats seem to make her competitive.</p>