<p>For those of you who havent seen the school and are thinking about applying, I want to share a few things with you about Grinnell that they dont promote very well. We visited 10 (yes, 10!) small liberal arts schools, including Middlebury, Pomona, Carleton, and Oberlin. Grinnell was low on my list because Iowa seemed so foreign, if you are from a major metropolitan area on the east or west coast. Im not going to tout the stuff that all these schools can tout: smart kids, engaging faculty, lots of research and overseas study opportunities, etc These are the things that set Grinnell apart in our minds (in no particular order):</p>
<p>1) The smallest class sizes or any LAC, which means more faculty contact. Even the intro classes, which are generally 50-70 students at the other schools, are only 25 at Grinnell.<br>
2) No distribution requirements, not because they are being slack, but because the advising is personalizeed. Theres no pick one from column A and two from column B because a faculty advisor works with you to figure out what makes the most sense. (And I always though language requirements were a waste of time: Youve had four years of a foreign language already, or you wouldnt have been admitted. Taking more should depend on what you are planning to do.)
3) Amazing facilities compared to the other LACs: Everyone knows they have an extraordinary endowment (Thank you Warren Buffet!), but what that translates into is VERY nice facilities. And although the building process has been a nuisance for prior classes, they are taking a break now, so the next few years should be construction free, or very limited.
4) Hands on approach to science: Emphasis on lab and field work-not just lectures and problems sets. And they have the facilities to support it.
5) Walk on sports teams: My son is a good all-round athlete but, at his large public high school, never quite good enough to make the team (if you didnt take up a sport by age 8 and get professional coaching by 12, you werent going to make the school team). At Grinnell, he can practice with the team and possibly even play for them.
6) Financial Aid including Merit Aid: They were very generous with our son. We are appreciative.
7) The culture: Not preppy, not jock, not self-consciously artsy. No frats. No intellectual posturing. Its didnt feel as slick and self-promoting as some schools. A strong work ethic. We found the Ivy wannabe vibe at some LACs in the northeast off-putting.
8) Rapidly loyal and enthusiastic alums. We spoke to eight of them: Every single one of them raved about the experience. Every single one of them offered to be a resource and offered to put him in touch with other alums in his areas of interest.<br>
9) Sheer un-ironic niceness. Coming from the suburbs of a large metropolitan area, its noteworthy.</p>
<p>Are there drawbacks? Sure. It's rural. Yes, Des Moine and Iowa City are only an hour away. Yes, they bring so many activities onto campus that you can't do them all. But it's still rural. If you need a bustling town, if shopping is your sport, Grinnell isn't it. (My son could care less.) There are LACs with prettier, and/or more exciting towns. There's better skiing/hiking elsewhere. The weather will never rivel Pomona's. Every school has assets and resources that distinguish it. You know what you care about.</p>
<p>Hope this helps those of you who are on the fence about applying.</p>