<p>Will attending Bryn Mawr mean sacrificing my social life with the opposite sex? </p>
<p>please give me some insight</p>
<p>Will attending Bryn Mawr mean sacrificing my social life with the opposite sex? </p>
<p>please give me some insight</p>
<p>Several current students at Bryn Mawr and Haverford have told me that it is all about the effort you put in to network within the Tri-co. I’m an incoming freshman at Haverford and when I was just out to visit during Accepted Students Weekend, I was introduced to many Bryn Mawr girls who had come over to the Haverford campus for Friday night parties and Saturday events. It seemed convenient for them to get around.</p>
<p>I think you’ll be alright :)</p>
<p>Bryn Mawr students can have a social life and many do, but you have to go out of your way to get it. Haverford is convenient for parties, but obviously not everyone can find a date there because only 20% of the Bi-Co students are male. Other options are Swarthmore, Penn, Villanova, Drexel, etc.</p>
<p>That being said, a women’s college is really not the place to be if your #1 priority in college is an active social life.</p>
<p>I agree – not as a #1 priority – but romance finds its way on campus. I dated a Haverford student for two years and a Penn law student and undergrad when I was at Bryn Mawr. I also enjoyed wonderful friendships with a few Haverford students. I met male students in classes, at the library, at meals, and just hanging out on campus.</p>