selection - College Admission Counseling https://greatcollegeadvice.com Great College Advice Fri, 15 Aug 2025 10:34:54 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.9 https://greatcollegeadvice.com/wp-content/uploads/2025/01/758df36141c47d1f8f375b9cc39a9095.png selection - College Admission Counseling https://greatcollegeadvice.com 32 32 Using Yelp To Help You Find a College With Good Food https://greatcollegeadvice.com/using-yelp-to-help-you-find-a-college-with-good-food/?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss&utm_campaign=using-yelp-to-help-you-find-a-college-with-good-food Tue, 21 Jun 2011 14:21:39 +0000 https://greatcollegeadvice.com/?p=7392 How do you find a campus with good restaurants around it? Try Yelp!

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On a recent visit to Lancaster, Pennsylvania, to visit Franklin and Marshall College, I discovered a great new tool to help me find where to eat in a college town.

Mark Montgomery
Educational Consultant
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I’m here in Lancaster, Pennsylvania, not too far from the campus of Franklin and Marshall College, a small liberal arts college, and one of the things about recommending colleges in small towns for some students is that they say, “Oh, well I like ethnic restaurants.  I really want to be able to have really great ethnic cuisine.”  So I know when I go to a small town like Lancaster, well I did a quick search on Yelp when I was here just to find a place to go to lunch and I thought Ethiopian, of course Mexican and Italian, but I also always look for Asian restaurants because I work with so many Chinese families and I came across this place called Rice and Noodles, which is a noodle shop, a Vietnamese noodle shop.
Apparently a family came here from New Orleans after Hurricane Katrina and set up shop here.  This is a fantastic, probably the best Vietnamese food I’ve ever had.  It has really great soup but two things.  Don’t assume that you’re not going to find really good ethnic cuisine in a smaller town because the United States is pretty global.  Secondly, if you’re a student from China, you need to do a little bit of homework in terms of what kinds of restaurants would be available.  Yelp is a great site.  It will tell you exactly how far from the campus a particular kind of cuisine may be.
So if you’re really thinking about a small town or a liberal arts college or something and you’re thinking, “I don’t know if I can really make this work because of my culinary habits,” Yelp, or what are the other social networking sites where you can find out exactly what is offered and exactly how far it is from campus.  So don’t make assumptions about small towns.  Some of them are extremely international.

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Menlo College: A Tiny, Focused Business College in Silicon Valley https://greatcollegeadvice.com/menlo-college-a-tiny-focused-business-college-in-silicon-valley/?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss&utm_campaign=menlo-college-a-tiny-focused-business-college-in-silicon-valley Tue, 05 May 2009 01:07:04 +0000 https://greatcollegeadvice.com/?p=2189 Last week I was able to visit Menlo College in Atherton, California.  I was part of a tour organized by the Independent Educational Consultants Association. Our tour began with a fine lunch in the dining hall—where the food is organic and the head of dining services has a commitment to serving local products, when possible.  […]

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Last week I was able to visit Menlo College in Atherton, California.  I was part of a tour organized by the Independent Educational Consultants Association. Our tour began with a fine lunch in the dining hall—where the food is organic and the head of dining services has a commitment to serving local products, when possible.  It’s hard to know whether the food is always as good as it was that day, but I was happy to stoke up on a couple of nice Asian dishes over rice.  Lunch was followed by a tour, and then a brief presentation and question-and-answer session with the College’s Provost (the fancy term for chief academic officer).

Here’s a bit of what I learned.

  1. As the Provost said, Menlo is not a small college, it’s a tiny college.  With each entering class made up of about 125 students, the total campus population is just under 600.  The campus is pleasantly verdant and compact, and classes take place in only two buildings, one of which is dedicated solely to business courses.
  2. The focus at Menlo is on business.  Most students are majoring in some flavor of business administration, though some pursue degrees in psychology or other liberal arts disciplines.
  3. Most Menlo students hail from California, with a smattering of students from other Western states.  Fifteen percent of students come from abroad, with most of those coming from Hong Kong and China.
  4. Menlo is a teaching college, where each faculty member is expected to teach four courses per semester.  While some faculty complain about the work load, the Provost gently reminds them that with the tiny size of the College and the small size of classes, most instructors teacher fewer than 50 students per semester. Thus faculty members are able to build close connections with faculty—because such relationships would be unavoidable.
  5. Menlo has only 30 full time faculty, and is trying to expand that number to 50. The Board of Trustees has given the Provost the directive to pay competitive salaries to attract and retain top faculty.  In addition, because of Menlo’s location in Silicon Valley, the College has access to an excellent pool of experienced and qualified adjunct instructors to teach in its business programs.  Twenty-one faculty members actually live on campus (and all faculty and staff may eat in the campus dining hall free of charge all year long!).
  6. Menlo’s location also gives students the opportunity to pursue part-time jobs, internships, and summer employment in the high-tech industry of Silicon Valley.
  7. Despite its tiny size, Menlo competes in NCAA Division III sports, and 40% of the students participate in varsity athletics.
  8. Historically, Menlo has had a strong set of services for students with learning differences. While the College is happy to serve students with a wide variety of learning styles, it is refocusing itself and has made the decision not to be a school that specializes in serving the needs of students with learning differences.
  9. Menlo’s President and current leadership team seems to have a strong, unified vision of how to transform this small college into a focused, ambitious little place—like the choo-choo train in the story, The Little Engine That Could.

I was pleased to finally visit Menlo.  I had met Bob Wilms, Menlo’s amiable and able director of admission, on several occasions.  While Bob is a great representative in extolling the virtues of Menlo, there is no substitute for walking the campus and meeting the people that form the core of the College.

College Consultant

 

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Bennington College: Creative, Self-Directed, Intellectually Serious Alternative https://greatcollegeadvice.com/bennington-college-creative-self-directed-intellectually-serious-alternative/?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss&utm_campaign=bennington-college-creative-self-directed-intellectually-serious-alternative Sat, 04 Apr 2009 13:14:19 +0000 https://greatcollegeadvice.com/?p=2079 I recently spent a gorgeous spring afternoon on the campus of Bennington College in southern Vermont.  The campus is a lovely mixture of colonial architecture and internationalist modern styles, and 650 students are proud to be known as a relatively off-beat, alternative, and artistic bunch.  Like Marlboro, Bennington does not offer traditional majors, but requires […]

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I recently spent a gorgeous spring afternoon on the campus of Bennington College in southern Vermont.  The campus is a lovely mixture of colonial architecture and internationalist modern styles, and 650 students are proud to be known as a relatively off-beat, alternative, and artistic bunch.  Like Marlboro, Bennington does not offer traditional majors, but requires students to develop their own plan of study that is closely supervised by the faculty.

This video offers a brief summary of my visit to Bennington.

Educational Consultant

 

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Marlboro: Quirky, Offbeat, Intellectually Serious Community https://greatcollegeadvice.com/marlboro-quirky-offbeat-intellectually-serious-community/?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss&utm_campaign=marlboro-quirky-offbeat-intellectually-serious-community Fri, 03 Apr 2009 13:10:05 +0000 https://greatcollegeadvice.com/?p=2077 I recently visited Marlboro College in southern Vermont.  Many colleges claim to be unique.  Marlboro merits the label. With only 320 students, Marlboro attracts students who want to take charge of their own intellectual development, who want to live in a quiet, rustic environment, and who are serious about getting involved in a tight-knit community. […]

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I recently visited Marlboro College in southern Vermont.  Many colleges claim to be unique.  Marlboro merits the label.

With only 320 students, Marlboro attracts students who want to take charge of their own intellectual development, who want to live in a quiet, rustic environment, and who are serious about getting involved in a tight-knit community.

Here’s a short video that summarizes my visit.

Educational Consultant

 

 

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Why Visit Colleges? An Expert College Counselor Explains https://greatcollegeadvice.com/why-visit-colleges-an-expert-college-counselor-explains/?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss&utm_campaign=why-visit-colleges-an-expert-college-counselor-explains Thu, 06 Mar 2008 17:12:08 +0000 https://greatcollegeadvice.com/?p=175 My clients are sometimes surprised to learn that I’m out of office so much. I spend about 20% of my time on the road paying personal visits to college campuses around the country. Want to learn more about how these visits can help you choose the right college? Have a look! [kml_flashembed movie="https://www.youtube.com/v/ax01YSeP27k" width="319" height="262" […]

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My clients are sometimes surprised to learn that I’m out of office so much. I spend about 20% of my time on the road paying personal visits to college campuses around the country.
Want to learn more about how these visits can help you choose the right college? Have a look!
[kml_flashembed movie="https://www.youtube.com/v/ax01YSeP27k" width="319" height="262" wmode="transparent" /]

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