<p>Before our son started looking at colleges a friend recommended the CTCL book. Both my husband and I had attended large state flagship universities, so this small liberal arts college idea was new and intriguing. In our college search we traveled near and far, visiting the large and the small, we kept returning to the small. </p>
<p>H and I had spent our first two years of college largely in humungous survey classes, they certainly paled in comparison to the small discussion/writing based classes S sat in on at the liberal arts colleges. The campuses were small and relationships intimate, with fellow students and with faculty. </p>
<p>We spent a day at UC Berkeley, sitting in on an upper level psychology class with 150 other people. The teacher was world renown and the lecture was very well done, however only 3 or 4 questions were answered and there was no discussion. Small study groups met, but were led by graduate assistants. Sure, there are small classes at UCB, but there are also a lot of huge ones. I was concerned about a mild mannered polite young man being thrown into a heartless bureaucracy where he’d have to scrap for classes and attention. People kept saying how beneficial it is to learn those skills, and I’m sure they’re right, but I imagined a lot of valuable time and emotion would be wasted on learning it in a sink or swim situation.</p>
<p>S applied to small liberal arts colleges (including several CTCLs) and 4 UCs. He was accepted to all. He followed his heart and now attends Whitman College, a CTCL school,he’s having an amazing experience and loves it there. There’s no hiding at the back of the room, he works hard in his classes, but has been rewarded with much personal attention and mentoring. His major department is small and very supportive, all the professors know and care about him. Socially, it’s also been great, he’s made really good friends and has a life beyond the classroom. He plays sports, does community service and is active in the outdoor program. He decided early on that the quality of life at college was important to him and he avoided places that felt overly competitive.</p>
<p>The only thing that’s been an adjustment for all of us is the reaction of acquaintances and strangers when they ask where S goes to college, 90% of the time the name Whitman College is met with a blank stare. Initially, I would launch into a lengthy explanation of how he got into UCB but decided to go to a small liberal arts college instead, yada, yada, yada. Now I don’t, I simply say that he goes to a great liberal arts college in Walla Walla, WA, and smile to myself because I know graduate schools know exactly where Whitman is.</p>