What colleges are similar to Hamilton?

<p>What colleges are similar to Hamilton?</p>

<p>Colgate, Middlebury, Williams, Bowdoin, Colby, Bates, Union, Lafayette, Franklin & Marshall.</p>

<p>Also: Kenyon, Hobart &William Smith, Dickinson, Muhlenberg, Allegheny.</p>

<p>Similar to Hamilton in what way? Be a bit more precise in your question.</p>

<p>In size: most small LACs.
In weather: Northeast with heavy snow.
In sports: NESCAC DIII, again most small LACs are DIII.
What other factors are you looking for? Politics, social scene/drinking, sports…</p>

<p>i think bates and connecticut college are the most similar in vibe- artsy and liberal yet sporty students</p>

<p>Maybe, I have just known the Hamilton grads that steered towards Wall Street positions and MBAs, but I never got the impression that Hamilton was as artsy as those other schools.</p>

<p>Similar in size, the type of people that attend, similar level of education. Thanks for all of the help</p>

<p>Worth considering but perhaps not as close a match as those already mentioned: Washington & Lee, Vassar, Bucknell, Skidmore & St. Lawrence.</p>

<p>thanks guys</p>

<p>

</p>

<p>I think Hamilton is somewhat schizophrenic in that it has roots in the male-WASP tradition and roots in the arts. All male Wall Street focused Hamilton merged with all female artsy Kirkland some years back and even today the former Kirkland campus is referred to as “the dark side.”</p>

<p>I think it offers a good balance across the total liberal arts disciplines – arts, sciences, social studies. </p>

<p>Other colleges that seem similar in personality: Bowdoin, Kenyon, Amherst, Williams, Cornell, Dartmouth, Conn College, Colgate.</p>

<p>Great, let’s just name every single northeastern LAC.</p>

<p>I don’t know if this is part of the appeal of Hamilton to you, but it is to some people — they have no distribution requirements. You don’t have to take anything you don’t want to, unless you have to take something in your major you don’t want to take. You do have to pass some kind of exam showing that you know basic quantitative skills. You have to take some P.E., and have to pass some kind of swimming test. I think there are maybe 6 or 7 other schools that don’t have distribution requirements. The list has been posted on this board before. The only other two I remember are Brown and Smith, which fall into somewhat different categories of colleges, for obvious reasons. </p>

<p>If that’s not part of the thing you like about Hamilton, I agree with others that there are almost limitless fine LAC’s in the Northeast that would be “similar” to Hamilton.</p>

<p>I second St. Lawrence</p>