<p>Im searching for a college</p>
<p>My SAT is 1880 and my GPA is 3.83</p>
<ol>
<li>Offers high financial aid</li>
<li>High 4 year graduation rate</li>
<li>Pretty Diverse college ( preferably more Asian ) </li>
<li>Offers alot of study abroad programs</li>
<li>Offers alot of internships</li>
<li>Small class size (around 20)</li>
<li>Small school ( preferably 6000-8000 students… 1000-2000 students is too few! I want to meet more people)</li>
<li>High acceptance rate to medical School</li>
<li>matching students with opportunities to work with doctors or in hospitals (this would be a bonus)</li>
<li>Caring Professors who are available and also willing to help students</li>
</ol>
<p>I have found a few colleges that meets most of the requirements such as Allegheny college, Rhodes College, Kalamazoo College, and Juniata College, but these college are too small (around 1000 students) and arent diverse at all. </p>
<p>THANKS!!!</p>
<p>Trinity university seems to match.</p>
<p>Check out Macalester College.
The school itself is only slightly more diverse than some of the ones you mention and has only slightly more than 2K students. However, its urban location (St. Paul MN) should give you more opportunities to meet people off campus. It claims to meet 100% of demonstrated need. 4-year graduation rate is 82%. ~70% of classes have fewer than 20 students. (Source: USNWR). </p>
<p>Comparing medical school acceptance rates is tricky and may not be a good basis for evaluating colleges (unless, perhaps, the rate is unusually high or low). </p>
<p>Macalester is more selective than Allegheny, Rhodes, Kalamazoo or Juniata. You might want to repeat the SATs (or try the ACT).</p>
<p>If you are female, you might want to consider Smith College. It is slightly larger and more racially/ethnically diverse than Macalester. Its membership in a consortium of 5 local colleges increases the population and diversity exposure. It seems to be a little less selective than Macalester.</p>
<p>Brandeis is coed. It’s a little larger, more diverse … and more selective … than all of the above. Undergrads are ~13% Asian (according to its Common Data Set). Claims to cover ~93% of demonstrated need.</p>
<p>Clark University has ~2300 undergrads. ~69% white, ~5% asian. ~60% of classes have fewer than 20 students. Claims to cover ~95% of demonstrated need on average. Avg SATs: 594CR, 595M. (Source: USNWR).</p>