The answer to the transfer rate will be in the Common Data Set. I couldn’t find the one for the past year but here is academic year 2015-16
http://institutionalresearch.vassar.edu/data/2015-2016/d-transfer.html
You are probably right, but many sources say that there is a slightly higher girls:guys ratio (56:44). I think they were even more unbalanced in the past as it was a women’s college. But it will probably be even within 10 or so years, I’m guessing.
Thanks for the help, Snowball City.
If you’re thinking about transferring into a UC (or a CSU) be sure to adhere to the very strict transfer requirements. Many majors have specific requirements, so you’d need to look at both general, as well as any major requirements that trump the general.
For non-California schools, in addition to those that have already been mentioned, particularly Mills, be sure to look at Lewis & Clark, Occidental, Goucher, Wesleyan, Macalester, U Puget Sound, U Washington, U British Columbia and Ithaca College.
Considering that transfer admission can be very tough for the top schools (check the Common Data Set) be sure that you have a solid range of reach, match and safe schools.
Middlebury
UT Austin is good and very LGBT friendly
Penn, Swarthmore, Brown, Northeastern, Columbia, any women’s college, Wesleyan, Middlebury, Ithaca, Haverford, Vassar … there are lots, but I’m well aware that not everywhere is friendly, even if they are “tolerant.” Check out https://www.campuspride.org
Also, if you are a lesbian check out: https://www.autostraddle.com/the-lesbian-insiders-guide-to-40-lgbt-friendly-college-campuses-104621/
Is there a campus that isn’t?
there aren’t really any prestigious LGBT unfriendly schools
@TooOld4School @sharebear111 Notre Dame is apparently very homophobic.
There are plenty of colleges that are not LGBT friendly (and most of those are very religious.)
I would guess that they majority of schools discussed on CC are fine (no one will harass you) to good (maybe you can find dates/other LGBT friends.) Schools that match roommates instead of randomly selecting them can be helpful, even at the “friendly” schools. I’ve heard more than one tale about students not wanting to share a dorm with someone gay.