<p>Pluses:</p>
<p>I think Smith has a ton of pluses, and it was a great place for me. To focus on some specific aspects of a single-sex environment:</p>
<p>a) The dorms (called houses at Smith), and really the whole campus, are cleaner and quieter. There's a lot less drinking. My siblings and parents attended co-ed schools and were always impressed that students didn't cause property damage, and that the bathrooms were really nice.</p>
<p>b) A single-sex student body means that the student body president, leader of all the clubs, etc. will always be a woman--as are a large number of professors, administrators, staff, etc. It's great to see so many women leading. I still remember a time during an internship I did in Washington--a fellow intern leaned over to me and whispered "do you notice anything strange about this meeting?" When I said no, he responded "I'm the only guy here!" But for me, seeing a bunch of powerful women around a boardroom table had become run-of-the-mill. </p>
<p>c) An network of female friends. A few years ago at Ivy Day Smith</a> College: Commencement, an alum held up a sign reading "my Smith friends are still my best friends." I'm only two years out, but this is certainly true for me. My friends are incredible--smart, giving, funny and doing diverse and fascinating things with their lives. I think a lot of the popularity of shows like the Golden Girls and Sex in the City stems from a yearning for the sort of close female friendships those shows depict. But I feel like Smith helped me get my own version. </p>
<p>The alumnae network is also a gem. Working at reunion and joining the alumnae club in my new hometown have helped me meet some amazing women of all ages: authors and ambassadors and attorneys and so much more. There probably aren't many situations in which women aged 24-74 can sit down together as equals and really just enjoy one another's company, but I've seen it happen over and over at my Smith book group, and other alumnae events. </p>
<p>Minuses:
If your daughter wants to date (or befriend) men, she will have a smaller pool to choose from and will have to work harder. It's not impossible to meet guys: keep in touch with friends from high school, take classes off campus, meet your friends' friends/brothers/classmates/etc., do jobs or internships during the year or over the summer, participate in clubs that get you off campus (sports, debate, religious, political, etc.), try online dating, etc.</p>
<p>I was worried upon graduation that I'd sabotaged myself--that by going to Smith I'd missed out on the chance to have male friends, or even on learning how to be friends with guys in their mid-20s (I didn't keep in touch with many people from high school or spend a lot of time off-campus, and my summer jobs either involved mostly-female environments or places where people were all older than me). Two years later, I'm pretty confident it hasn't handicapped me, and I have friends of both genders from work and grad school, through friends and relatives, etc.</p>