Considering BMC? Bryn Mawr college is a very small place: limited course and major offerings. My senior year was really frustrating. I am into languages, and took Spanish, French, and Russian. Spanish classes were hard, but I learned a ton, loved them. I wanted to pursue Russian Flagship at Bryn Mawr, and had to take "Russian for Pre-Professionals": small college, small department, I had no choice. The course was taught by a lady from Kharkiov (Ukraine), she doesn't have a Ph.D. Although she was a well educated intelligent person, we were questioning how she could prepare us for life in St. Petersburg: she grew up and went to school in a Ukranian town. She also had a tendency to speak about lofty things nobody cared about (going off on a tangent) and was often extremely disorganized and unclear. I felt trapped during my fourth year: the course wasn't preparing me for real world experience in St. Pete at all. First three years were great, although the social opportunities were lacking, and campus life was quite uneventful. I liked great sense of community at Bryn Mawr and the comfort of the campus. Students learned just as much from each other and BMC community, as they did from their professors (unlike during my fourth year, during the first three I was taught by the actual professors, people who held doctorate degrees and knew their stuff). Campus community fosters tight bonds that will last far beyond graduation: this is truly awesome. And the campus is absolutely gorgeous, by the way!
Bryn Mawr campus Bryn Mawr Flagship Russian
Bryn Mawr campus Bryn Mawr Flagship Russian