Schools

Bryn Mawr College Has Most Liberal Students: Princeton Review

The women's college also was ranked quite well for campus beauty, LGBTQ friendliness, active student government, and many more.

BRYN MAWR, PA – Bryn Mawr College is well known for its stellar academics, and has consistently been included on national lists thanks to the prestige of many of its programs. However, its latest commendation is of a different variety.

The Princeton Review's most recent analysis of the country's 384 best colleges for 2019 included numerous "Best Of" and "Worst Of" lists that aim to give a fuller picture of college life. Bryn Mawr appeared on several lists and was ranked rather high, even taking the No. 1, No. 2, No. 3, and No. 4 spots in some of the lists.

Check out how Bryn Mawr College ranked in the publication's lists:

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  • 1st in Most Liberal Students
  • 2nd in LGBTQ-Friendly
  • 2nd in Most Beautiful Campus
  • 3rd in Most Active Student Government
  • 4th in Best College Dorms
  • 10th in Best Campus Food
  • 10th in Nobody Plays Intramural Sports
  • 17th in Professors Get High Marks
  • 19th in Best Quality of Life

Robert Franek, the editor in chief, noted stellar academics aren't the only things students — and parents — look for in a college.

"We created our 62 ranking lists to help narrow that search," he said. "They are based entirely on data we gather beyond academics that give insight into what the schools' enrolled students say about their professors, administrators, school services, campus culture, and student life. In the end, it's all about the fit."

Find out what's happening in Bryn Mawr-Gladwynefor free with the latest updates from Patch.

Although the tutoring, test prep, and college admission services company did not rank the top 384 colleges — the list is in alphabetical order — it did rank them for its 62 category lists. Topics covered in those lists include best college theater, best science lab facilities, best party schools, most beautiful campus and even silly things like "nobody plays intramural sports."

The tongue in cheek rankings focused only on schools highly recommended by the study's authors, who said in a news release that the 384 "best" colleges were primarily based on their "outstanding academics."

The Princeton Review said it surveyed 138,000 students who attend the schools and asked them to rate the institutions on dozens of topics.

To see all Pennsylvania colleges on the list, see here.

Image via Shutterstock

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