Yes, Green Mountain College in Poultney and Sterling College in Craftsbury Vermont sound like this.
DS 16 is interested in Forensic Psychology. I have no clue how he even heard of it. Are there any schools known for this program? Anyone have any experience in the field?
CoA is on the radar. The Evergreen someone mentioned looked interesting too. I will look at Green Mountain now. Thanks for the ideas.There are so many small schools that it would be impossible to know about all of them.
No, you're not. I have the 4.4 GPA, #26 out of 350+ in her class, great work ethic, super extra-curriculars kid . . . AND I have the strong-average kid coming along behind her.I brought that up earlier as well. Evidently we are the only 2 people on The Dis who have an average kid.![]()
I was very disappointed in our college fair and have no intention of attending another. We didn't learn a single thing that couldn't have been garnered from the internet. It was super-crowded. I won't go back again when it's time for my youngest.We didn't spend a lot of time talking to the reps themselves at the college fair--first, it was crowded-second, I didn't really want a sales talk. I wanted to see pictures of the campus, see what their general admission requirements were, etc. It was mainly to see a name on a booth and see some pictures of campuses to start narrowing things down for DS.
Marine Biology -- look into UNC-Wilmington, but be aware that admission to that program is tough. One of my best students (she's probably neck-and-neck with my above-described superstar academic daughter) is going to apply there next year, and she's nervous about getting in.Marine Biology...we have a person who graduated from Maryville College (TN) who then went on to University of Maryland (College Park) and is now a professor at USC. Her and her DH are both into Marine Biology in a big way, I believe. Heidleburg is the last name now, I think.
My daughter LOVES that she's getting more mail than anyone else in the house. She made an off-handed comment to her younger sister the other day about how "someday you'll be getting all this self-esteem raising mail". As if that oldest kid of mine needed to esteem herself any more highly!I'm at the point where I don't care where my son goes just make a choice. He is sick of all the mail he is getting.
That's why you visit. Similarly, my daughter is currently crazy about Clemson. I've read a bunch of reviews online, and I'm convinced it's not "her". I'd never convince her of that, nor do I want to be the bad guy . . . so I'm going to take her and let her figure it out for herself. I tell my students (and my own kids) all the time: Figuring out what you DON'T WANT is valuable information, just as valuable as deciding what you DO WANT.We went to tour College of the Atlantic!!! Drove 8 hours to get there. We toured for two days, talked to advisers, bought dd a t-shirt and came home. Then she decided it wasn't for her. My impression of the school was that it was for kids that are free thinkers. Lots of kids wearing cornrows in their hair, artsy types. Dd is not like that. She is more of a country girl and it wasn't a good fit.
On the internet EVERYONE'S child is a genius!!Just reading some of the college forums you'd think Einstein was cloned a million times over...
And IF they have one average kid, the other one is a mixture of Steve Jobs and Bill Gates. It's a complete reflection on themselves.
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No, you're not. I have the 4.4 GPA, #26 out of 350+ in her class, great work ethic, super extra-curriculars kid . . . AND I have the strong-average kid coming along behind her.
My daughter LOVES that she's getting more mail than anyone else in the house. She made an off-handed comment to her younger sister the other day about how "someday you'll be getting all this self-esteem raising mail". As if that oldest kid of mine needed to esteem herself any more highly!
If he's going into teaching, the name on his diploma doesn't matter. What matters is that he passes the tests to become licensed. I would make one suggestion before he chooses: Consider the locations that each college might send him for student teaching. I live near a major university, so we get LOTS of student teachers, and I know that the college tries to place them all within a one-hour drive of the university for the convenience of the University Superviser, who has quite a number of student teachers to watch over.
Also, since he's near the top of his class, be sure to investigate Teaching Fellows Programs. The selection process favors guys, which is unfair but works in your favor! I don't know if it's the same in all states, but the money is great and Teaching Fellows go straight to the head of the line when it comes to getting jobs. A student who receives Teaching Fellows for four years must agree to teach four years in your state's public schools or repay the money.That's why you visit.
Thanks for the info. Were also in the process of getting his Indian papers so that could help him even more.
I know Mn has a teaching program that gives him money and then he has to agree to teach in low income schools for a certain time. That can't be used until junior year so we haven't spent a lot of time checking that out. Right now its just been about scholarships and what school he is going to go too. Hopefully he will have a better idea this weekend. He hates making decisions but he doesn't have much choice, we aren't making this one for him.
If anyone has names of a school like this, please share:
a very small student body, in the mountains or deserts, preferably private, outdoorsy/ecological, accepts classic underachievers. Lots of opportunities for hands on things-not strictly classroom.
In the three schools we visited he would NEED a car. Two had assigned parking and one had eons of parking spots around the main buildings. All were in very wide spread out campuses outside of the city. One was only 4 years old and had a parking deck.
My daughter is currently a sophomore and is very interested in environmental science, ecology, wildlife science, and conservation, just to name a few. In the avalanche of college mail she received a brochure from SUNY - Environmental Science and Forestry which really piqued her interest. Now, she has a fully funded Virginia prepaid tuition plan and we always figured she would go instate, however this school seems to be right up her alley. Does anyone know anything about this school. She is not a genius, lol, but a good student with a 3.4 gpa. TIA!
My daughter LOVES that she's getting more mail than anyone else in the house. She made an off-handed comment to her younger sister the other day about how "someday you'll be getting all this self-esteem raising mail". As if that oldest kid of mine needed to esteem herself any more highly!
If he's going into teaching, the name on his diploma doesn't matter. What matters is that he passes the tests to become licensed. I would make one suggestion before he chooses: Consider the locations that each college might send him for student teaching. I live near a major university, so we get LOTS of student teachers, and I know that the college tries to place them all within a one-hour drive of the university for the convenience of the University Superviser, who has quite a number of student teachers to watch over.
Also, since he's near the top of his class, be sure to investigate Teaching Fellows Programs. The selection process favors guys, which is unfair but works in your favor! I don't know if it's the same in all states, but the money is great and Teaching Fellows go straight to the head of the line when it comes to getting jobs. A student who receives Teaching Fellows for four years must agree to teach four years in your state's public schools or repay the money.That's why you visit.
Thanks for the info. Were also in the process of getting his Indian papers so that could help him even more.
I know Mn has a teaching program that gives him money and then he has to agree to teach in low income schools for a certain time. That can't be used until junior year so we haven't spent a lot of time checking that out. Right now its just been about scholarships and what school he is going to go too. Hopefully he will have a better idea this weekend. He hates making decisions but he doesn't have much choice, we aren't making this one for him.
Do you know what percentage Indian you have to be to "qualify"? I tried finding this info for DS but kept running into dead ends. My Grandma was born on an Indian Reservation and was half or a quarter Ojibwa-not sure if we are too far out for that or not.
One thing to consider is if he sticks with education, where will he want to do his student teaching? Find out which towns the schools have agreements with. It would be nice if he could live on campus or at home during his semester of student teaching.
Would audio/music engineering be up his alley? A friend's son is going here next year for audio/music engineering:
http://www.belmont.edu/academicprograms/undergraduate/index.html
All I know is it is THE place he wanted to go..
It's in Tenn. so not TOO far from GA.
DS 16 is interested in Forensic Psychology. I have no clue how he even heard of it. Are there any schools known for this program? Anyone have any experience in the field?
DS 16 is interested in Forensic Psychology. I have no clue how he even heard of it. Are there any schools known for this program? Anyone have any experience in the field?
He should look for a solid pyschology program for undergrad (and probably one that offers some forensic pysch electives), and then go to grad school for forensic psychology. Most schools won't have programs that specialized for undergrads. He may want to look into schools with Criminology programs as well.
Would audio/music engineering be up his alley? A friend's son is going here next year for audio/music engineering:
http://www.belmont.edu/academicprograms/undergraduate/index.html
All I know is it is THE place he wanted to go..
It's in Tenn. so not TOO far from GA.
My son is interested in Television/Film but my great niece is majoring in audio! She lives in Chattanooga! I sent her the information, Thanks!![]()