Posted on 09/22/2009 5:09:21 PM PDT by jazusamo
There is so much for high school seniors and their parents to know about colleges that they not only need to get a lot of information but also need to make sure it is the right kind of information.
A number of college guides have useful information but, unfortunately, the best-known and most pretentious of these guides "America's Best Colleges" is grossly misleading.
There is no such thing as a "best" college, any more than there is any such thing as a "best" wife or a "best" husband. Who would be best for a particular person depends on that person.
Would we not consider it absurd if someone collected statistics on people and then used those statistics to rank individuals according to who would make the "best" wife or husband? Yet that is the approach "America's Best Colleges" is based on.
A college that would be best for a particular student could be a terrible place for that student's brother or sister. One of them might find West Point a great experience, while the other would fit in perfectly at Reed College and each might be miserable at the other institution.
Choosing the college that is right for a particular person is not about the rankings of institutions. It is about matching a student with an institution that can enable that person to flourish while there, and to graduate with an education that is a foundation for a fulfilling life in the years ahead.
Among the things you need to know about a particular college is whether it has a real curriculum or just a smorgasbord of courses, so that it is possible to graduate knowing nothing about history, economics or science, for example. Some of the most prestigious colleges in the country are places where you can graduate completely ignorant of such fundamental subjects.
What also matters is whether the intellectual atmosphere is one in which competing ideas are explored and debated, or one in which there is a prevailing orthodoxy of political correctness that a student can challenge only at the risk of being ridiculed by the professor, given a low grade or in some places suspended or expelled for violating a campus speech code by giving an honest opinion about things where an orthodoxy is imposed, such as issues involving "race, class and gender."
In short, what is important is not choosing the "best" college, according to some statistics that conceal the arbitrary choices behind the objective-looking numbers. What is important is choosing the right college for you.
The best of the college guides reflects that difference in its title "Choosing the Right College." Its latest edition has just been published. Like people, it has put on some weight over the years and its seventh edition is now 1,140 pages long. Unlike some of us, however, its additional weight is muscle rather than fat.
"Choosing the Right College" tells you whether there is or is not a curriculum at each of the colleges it covers and whether classes are taught by professors or by graduate students.
It also tells you whether the intellectual atmosphere is free or is hidebound with political correctness, and plagued by professors who think their job is to use the classroom as a place to sound off about their political ideology to a captive audience, even when the course is about chemistry or accounting.
"Choosing the Right College" also presents information on such things as black separatist organizations at Lafayette College, for example. Whether you are for or against such things, you need to know about them, in order to choose what you think is right for you.
Co-ed living arrangements are also discussed, including just how co-ed they are that is, whether males and females simply live in the same dormitory and/or share the same room and/or use the same bathrooms and showers. It also mentions some colleges where you don't have to live co-ed at all, if you don't want to.
If you want to get more than one college guide, there is also "Barron's Profiles of American Colleges" which has much more statistical detail and can be a useful supplment. But "Choosing the Right College" is a must even if it is not carried in your local bookstore, and you have to order it on-line or from its publisher, ISI Books in Wilmington, Delaware.
Then you are sharing my current suffering!!
Yep
Crazy or not, you don't DO stuff like that. Or at least if you do, you should be fired, stripped of your credentials, and sued until your eyeballs rattle.
Superficially, your argument has merit. But in the real world, liberalism at science/engineering schools like Georgia Tech (for example) has proved to be a horrible problem. In fact, they were sued and entered into a consent order because their discrimination against conservative students was so blatant and so illegal.
No argument.
Was this ‘guidance’ counselor at a public or private high school?
I'm not sure of their engineering placement rate, it's not primarily an engineering school (I think they have a deal with a nearby university for some courses to get a B.S. in the various engineering disciplines) and my daughter's not in that field. But their placement rate for med and vet school is near 100 percent.
No mixed floors although some dorms are mixed. There are "substance free dorms" where the residents agree not to smoke, drink or use drugs, daughter loves living there (she's a senior) and says people really do honor it.
No graduate school, so all the courses are taught by profs -- NO TAs!!!! I understand from the academic grapevine that my alma mater which used to pride itself on no TAs, now has them all over the place and the profs just do lectures.
They are very very strict in grading - she got her very first C, in Organic Chemistry < sob! >
It's in a small town, which is awesome. Daughter says it's like Mayberry RFD - the barbershop is owned by the third generation of the same family.
I meant to ask . . . if you are a Catholic, do you have to attend chapel, or will going to Mass fulfil your obligation?
BTW, for those who listen to talk radio, Prof. Walter Williams, who regularly subs for Rush Limbaugh when he takes a break or is on vacation, used to teach at Grove City College. He later moved to George Mason University to become chairperson of their Economics Department.
In fact, she'll graduate with a biology major and a minor in theology. She has had a good time arguing with the profs in her theology classes!
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