Boston is the American melting pot of college students. Whether you attend
a four-year or two-year college, a medical or law school, a business or
vocational school, or a school for the arts or sciences, each institution is
a single thread woven with the others to make the fabric of a major
international center for higher education. Whatever field you choose to
endeavor, you can be assured there is a school in Boston to fill the need.
Many schools have cooperative or exchange programs with other institutions,
which allow their students to take courses which they do not offer
themselves.
Once upon a time, college applicants would have to trek to the library, or
go the high school guidance office, or would have to write to a school to
send a brochure. Today the internet brings all these campuses to the home
computer. There are many excellent on-line college directories. College and
University Home Pages is a web site which has
homepages of colleges worldwide. There are valuable links to specialty and
vocational schools from fields ranging from healthcare, to truck driving, to
welding.
In 1636 Harvard College in Cambridge, with one professor and nine students,
was chartered by the Great and General Court of the Massachusetts Bay
Colony. Two years later the school was named for the Minister John Harvard
of Charlestown, who left his library and much of his estate to the college
upon his death. This was the genesis of Boston emerging as a world leading
center of higher education. Today, the name Harvard is an icon. The
legacy of Harvard graduates includes seven American Presidents, and world
renowned notables in law and business, science and medicine, engineering and
the arts, to name a few.
Almost as legendary as Harvard itself, is its home, Harvard Square. This
urban, historical, neighborhood is at the center of university life in
Boston. The square is filled with an array of ethnic restaurants, coffee
houses, museums, and theaters. As you walk along Mass. Ave and the other
streets, the square is alive with street performers, unique shops, and a
steady flow of diverse pedestrians drawn to the square for reasons of their
own.
A couple of miles from Harvard Square, eastbound along Massachusetts Avenue,
is the campus of The Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT). Opened in
1865 the mission for the new institute was, "To establish a new kind of
independent educational institution relevant to an increasingly
industrialized America. Rogers (MIT's first president William Barton Rogers)
stressed the pragmatic and practicable. He believed that professional
competence is best fostered by coupling teaching and research and by
focusing attention on real-world problems." MIT has played a major role in
engineering and technology development for the government the private
sector. A 1994 study reported that MIT graduates founded more 4,000 firms
providing products and services, while employing more than a million people.
Through 2002, 56 graduates and faculty members of MIT had been awarded Nobel
Prizes.
Six miles from downtown Boston in Chestnut Hill, is the Gothic-style campus
of Boston College. The school's name is somewhat of a misnomer as BC is in
fact a University with more than 13,000 undergraduates studying 50 fields in
its11 schools. Founded in 1863, Boston College is one of the country's
oldest Jesuit schools. The Jesuits have maintained a major role in every
department, however BC has developed as a muti-ethnic, diverse university
open to all faiths. BC has New England's only major Division 1 athletic
program, achieving national prominence in football, basketball, and hockey,
while successfully maintaining high academic standards for student athletes.
If you leave the BC campus and travel 'inbound' (by car of the MBTA) along
Commonwealth Avenue toward the Back Bay, you soon will find yourself amidst
the fourth largest independent university in America, Boston University.
For the more than 30,000 students from all 50 states and 135 countries, the
BU experience is more than academics. The urban setting enables students to
enjoy the benefits of the city. Downtown theaters, shopping, the financial
district, and Fenway Park are all a walk or a subway ride away. On a spring
day you will find BU students boating, jogging, or sunning along the Charles
River.
After your visit to BU, jump on the Green Line E Train at Kenmore Square and
take a ride down Huntington Avenue to the campus of Northeastern University.
Like BU, Northeastern students benefit from the experience of college in
Boston while learning at a beautiful urban campus. The NU campus houses
many of the finest research facilities in the city, and has the largest
academic library in Boston. The campus is also situated in area known as
the Cultural District, between The Museum of Fine Arts, and Symphony Hall.
Northeastern is a pioneer in cooperative education with the worlds largest
program. The practical experience from 'co-op' gives the NU grad an
advantage for preparing for the workplace after college.
For many, a career training school is a more pragmatic path than a
traditional college, for preparing for life in the real world. These schools
offer practical training for a specific jobs or trades and provide aid for
job placement. Vocational Colleges often require less time to complete
because students are not required to take many of the general ed. courses
required of a college curriculum. Search4careercolleges.com
covers a wide range of topics from housing, financial aid, SAT and GED
preparation, as well as notices of job fairs and related articles.
Mass Mentor is a free service for students and
parents searching for the right school in Massachusetts. There are links
for other essentials a student will need to prepare for going to college in
Boston. An article "Thirteen Tips on Selecting the Right School in Boston"
found on About.com is
another source for prospective students. A resource for out-of-towners
planning to visit schools in the Boston area is Campus Visit / Boston. This
site has information for visitors to make the best use of their time in the
city, and for finding convenient accommodations for their stay.
Boston is truly a special place to go to college. The major area schools
cited above represent a small percentage of the academic community.
Whichever school you attend, you are part of a bigger community of people
from around the world converging to the nations leading center of research,
and study. An illustrious roster of eminent leaders in politics, medicine,
literature, and the performing arts, spent their formative years in the
classrooms, labs, and studios in Boston, "America's College Town."
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