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Health & Fitness

Look to the liberal arts

Harvard, Yale, Stanford and other large, prestigious universities contain top-notch student bodies and, for the most part, provide excellent undergraduate educations; but so do places like Swarthmore, Carleton, Pomona, and other small, liberal arts institutions.   While their names may not inspire as much awe around the dinner table or look as good on the back of a car, liberal arts colleges offer several academic and extracurricular advantages that students at larger and more pre-professional schools would be hard-pressed to find.

For one, the faculty at liberal arts colleges put undergraduates first.  Often without a graduate cohort and less bound to research than their university counterparts, liberal arts faculty have more opportunities to interact with and advise their undergraduate students. As such, students at liberal arts institutions often find their professors more accessible than do students at universities.  Second, liberal arts colleges tend to have, on average, smaller class sizes.  At universities, it is not uncommon for freshmen to enroll in courses containing 300+ students or go through an entire semester without uttering a single word inside the classroom.  This isn’t the case at a liberal arts school. If you enjoy class discussion and the opportunity to forge close relationships with your fellow classmates, a liberal arts institution may be your best bet.  Finally, students at liberal arts colleges have access to certain extracurricular activities that would otherwise be unavailable to them at large universities, such as joining a varsity sport or assisting their favorite professor in a research project.  At a liberal arts college, you do not have to compete with a PhD student or NFL prospect to represent your college and reap the personal and social benefits that come from deep involvement in an extracurricular activity.

So, yes, liberal arts colleges do offer a variety of benefits to students during their undergraduate years.  But maybe you’re not as concerned about what liberal arts schools do for students during college as you are with what these institutions do for students after they have graduated.  After all, isn’t college a means to an end?  What about job prospects and prospects for admission into graduate school? Well, the following are just a few facts confirming that liberal arts schools do indeed prepare their students for life after college:

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·         Liberal arts colleges constitute six of the ten postsecondary institutions that graduate the highest percentage of eventual PhDs.

·         More fortune 500 CEO’s possess liberal arts degrees (approximately 40%) than professional degrees—the same is true of doctors and lawyers.

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·         Institutions represented among the Class of 2015 at Yale Law School, the highest-ranked law school in the country, include Albion, Amherst, Barnard, Holy Cross, Davidson, Pomona, Reed, St. John’s and several other excellent, albeit lesser known liberal arts institutions.

·         A study released just this year shows that by mid-career, liberal arts majors earn MORE than those with degrees in pre-professional fields.

As evident from the above, bigger isn’t necessarily better when it comes to choosing a college.  So, if you’re the kind of student who desires a tight-knit community, intimate learning environment, and a chance to participate in all aspects of campus life, consider sacrificing the big name decal for the opportunity to enjoy a substantive and very meaningful four years. Consider a liberal arts college.

College Transitions is a team of college planning experts committed to guiding families through the college admissions process. As counselors and published higher education researchers, we aim to bring perspective (and some sanity) to college planning, and we strive to provide students with the support they need to enroll and succeed at a college that is right for them. Please visit our website—www.collegetransitions.com—to learn more.





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