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WILLIAMS COLLEGE VS CORNELL UNIVERSITY SIDE-BY-SIDE COMPARISON
1. WILLIAMS COLLEGE
Williams College is a private institution that was founded in 1793. It has a total undergraduate enrollment of 2,045, its setting is rural, and the campus size is 450 acres. It utilizes a 4-1-4-based academic calendar. Williams College's ranking in the 2016 edition of
Best Colleges is
National Liberal Arts Colleges, 1. Its tuition and fees are $50,
070 (2015-16).
Williams College – located in
Williamstown, Massachusetts, at the foot of
Mount Greylock in the Berkshires – is one of the oldest colleges in the country.
The school was originally a men’s college; women were first admitted in
1970. The college’s fraternities were abolished in the
1960s. The school’s traditions include a semiannual, schoolwide trivia contest and a
Mountain Day each October when students hike Mount Greylock. The
Williams Ephs, named after the school’s founder
Ephraim Williams, participate in
NCAA Division III varsity sports in the
New England Small
College Athletic Conference.
Williams is also part of the unofficial
Little Three athletic conference with
Amherst College and
Wesleyan University. The school requires almost all students to live on campus.
Williams College has three academic branches – languages and the arts, social sciences, and science and mathematics – and graduate programs in the history of art and economics. Williams has small class sizes, with a student-teacher ratio of 7-to-1. The school also has Oxford-style tutorials, which rely heavily on student participation. The college has seen many firsts: Its alumni society is the oldest in the world; it hosted the first intercollegiate baseball game; and its class of 1887 was the first in the
U.S. to wear caps and gowns at graduation. The school has a tradition at each graduation to drop a watch from the top of the college chapel
. If the watch breaks, tradition holds that the class will be lucky. Notable alumni include
Elia Kazan, director of "
On the Waterfront" and "
A Streetcar Named Desire";
John Frankenheimer, director of "
The Manchurian Candidate"; and
Prince Hussain Aga Khan, whose father is the spiritual leader of the
Shia Imami Ismaili Muslims.
2. CORNELL UNIVERSITY
Cornell University is a private institution that was founded in 1865. It has a total undergraduate enrollment of 14,453, its setting is rural, and the campus size is 745 acres. It utilizes a semester-based academic calendar. Cornell University's ranking in the 2016 edition of Best Colleges is
National Universities, 15. Its tuition and fees are $49,116 (2015-16).
Cornell University, located in
Ithaca, New York, has more than 1,
000 student organizations on campus, which range from the
Big Red Marching Band to the
International Affairs Society. First-year students live together on north campus, and the university has housing options for upperclassmen and graduate students, though many choose to live off campus.
Cornell has a thriving
Greek life, with more than 60 fraternity and sorority chapters. Cornell has more than 30
NCAA Division I varsity teams that compete in the
Ivy League. The
Cornell Big Red are perhaps best known for their successful men's lacrosse team, which won nine consecutive
Ivy League titles from 2003 to
2011. Cornell also has a strong hockey program.
Each of Cornell's 14 colleges and schools admits its own students and provides its own faculty, even though every graduate receives a degree from Cornell University. Cornell's two largest undergraduate colleges are the
College of Arts and Sciences and the
College of Agriculture and
Life Sciences. Its graduate schools include the highly ranked
S.C. Johnson Graduate School of Management,
College of Engineering,
Law School and
Weill Cornell Medical College. Cornell is also well known for its top-ranked
College of
Veterinary Medicine and the highly esteemed
School of Hotel Administration. One of Cornell's oldest traditions is
Dragon Day, during which a dragon built by first-year architecture students is paraded through campus. Notable alumni include U.S.
Supreme Court Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg, author
E.B. White and
Bill Nye, the "Science Guy."
- published: 09 May 2016
- views: 0