Question 1: What are you up to now?
21% Business
17% Academia
14% Medical
10% Law
7% Parenting
6% Communications
4% Arts
4% Public Sector
15% Other (including people who chose more than one answer)
Question 2: Have you found a life partner?
86% Yes (18% are partnered with another Brown grad)
14% No
Question 3: Have you been divorced or separated?
87.5% No
12.5% Yes
Question 4: Are you a parent?
82.5% Yes
17.5% No
Question 5: How many kids do you have?
21.5% 1
51% 2
22% 3
4% 4
1% 5
.5% More than 5
Question 6: What's the best trip you've ever taken? What's your future dream destination?
Best Trip
9.5% Italy
6.6% Hawaii
5.2% Africa
4.78% Australia
4.3% France
3.8% Costa Rica
3.3% each Cross Country Road Trip (US), India, Peru
2.78% each Thailand, Galapagos, New Zealand
Dream Destinations
7.6% each Italy, Australia, Africa/Safari - tied at 16 answers each
7.1% New Zealand - 15 answers
5.2% Peru
4.3% Greece
3.8% each Iceland, South America - tied at 8 answers
Question 7: What is the best book you've read recently?
We had over 200 responses to this question, with a lot of variety in the responses. There were a few books that popped up more than others, though, and here they are:
All The Light We Cannot See Anthony Doerr
Americanah by Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie
The Boys In The Boat by Daniel James Brown
Game of Thrones by George R. R. Martin
Station Eleven by Emily St. John Mandel
The Goldfinch by Donna Tartt
Ready Player One by Ernest Cline
Wolf Hall by Hilary Mantel
Question 8: If you have a blog, give us the URL so we can share it with the class.
http://blogs.law.harvard.edu/billofhealth/category/contributors/suzanne-rivera/
http://pratishabudhiraja.blogspot.com/
http://workingnarratives.org/category/blog/
http://wendytellsall.com/blog/
http://www.csvinc.org/news-events/csv-blog/
http://sicklesmarket.blogspot.com/
Question 9: Give us three words that you think describe Brown.
We had over 200 responses to this question, with a lot of repeats among the list. Here are some of the words that were given most often:
Life-changing
Independent
Open
Challenging
Inspiring
Creative
Progressive
Eclectic
Welcoming
Diverse
Fun
Awesome
Intense
Liberal
Smart
Elite
Interesting
Unique
Question 10: What are you most proud of in your life?
Not surprisingly, children/family and career were the most often cited responses to the question of what you are most proud of, though family significantly outweighed career.
32.3% My children
27.6% My family
18% My career/work accomplishments
6.9% Other
5.5% Volunteering/helping others
2.8% Overcoming adversity
1.8% Going to Brown
1.8% Starting my own business
1.4% Living my life based on faith/ethics
Question 11: If you had 24 free hours, how would you spend them?
Sleep, reading, time with family/friends and outdoor activities/sports were the most often mentioned. Many people listed multiple activities.
47.8% Outdoor activities - hiking, biking, walking, golf, ski, tennis, etc.
44% Time with Family/Friends
24% Reading
22% Sleep/rest/nap
9.6% Restaurant/Food
8.6% Hobbies - paint, bake, write, sew, etc.
5.9% Spa/Pampering
5.3% Travel
4.8% Housework/Organizing
Question 12: If you have a child in college, how has your perspective on college changed?
The most common response to this question was that the focus must be on the child’s happiness via pursuing the best college. Here is what you had to say:
It’s less about name and more about fit.
The best match is the most important thing.
Prestige means nothing if the child is not happy.
My son did not even apply to Brown. Each kid needs to find their best match.
It has to be a place that is right for the kid.
Choose a school that fits the kid's personality and goals.
We all need to find our own path.
A number of people also noted how much harder, more stressful, more expensive and more competitive college has become.
Finally, there was an equally large cohort of classmates who self-described themselves as "late starters":
Not yet
Not me yet
Not yet in college
No children in college yet
My child is 11
My child is in Nursery School
My kid’s still in diapers
My child is three going on four
My child is in Kindergarten, so ask me at 40th
Question 13: What is the greatest source of stress in your life?
These answers were a challenge to analyze because there is so much overlap in the responses. Many people provided more than one response as well. Here are the top categories of stress-causers:
26.3% Work/job/career
18.2% Work/life balance
17.3% Parenting/family, including several responses about how much to intervene in kids' decisions
12.9% Money
9.6% Not enough hours in the day
The rest of the responses included: marriage, mother-in-law, making good choices, parents' health, own health, housework, moving, retiring, finding faith, and contemporary politics.
Then we asked some questions about our upcoming 25th reunion in May:
1. Do you plan to come back to Brown for reunion?
47% Yes
7% No
45% Not sure
2. Are you coming solo or with others?
7.5% Solo
15% With a partner
26% With my family
45% Not sure
3. Are you staying on-campus or off-campus?
14.5% On-campus
28.5% Off-campus
50.5% Not sure yet
In early 2008, we sent out a survey to each member of the Class of ‘91 for whom we had an email address. We received responses from 340 people, 22% of the class, and we compared the results to the original 2003 class survey (245 people, 18% of the class). Thank you very much to those who took the time to respond - the results were very interesting! The following is a summary of the answers.
Question 1: What are you up to now?
30% Business/Communications
17% Academia
11.5% Medical
9.5% Parenting
8.9% Law
5% Arts
3.6% Public Sector
14% Other/Chilling
These numbers haven’t changed much since our last survey in 2003. Slightly more people answered “Parenting” and slightly fewer said “Public Sector” this time. As for the people who chose “Other”, many are full-time graduate students or are teaching. One person is making handmade acoustic guitars, one is in the ministry, and one is “establishing a farm/working as a chef.” Our favorite response: “I find it mildly annoying that a Brown survey makes it impossible to choose both parenting and an additional pastime... I am both parenting my 2 kids and running my business.”
Question 2: Have you found a life partner?
85.5% of the respondents have found a life partner, 11.8% have not, and 3.2% aren’t sure yet. In 2003, 77% of the people who responded to the survey had found a life partner, 16% had not, and 4% said “Maybe.”
Question 3: Is your partner a Brown graduate?
17.7 % of the respondents have found a Brown graduate as a life partner. 77.4% of those partners are from the classes of ’91-’93.
Question 4: Are you a parent?
69% of the survey respondents are parents, up from 47% in 2003.
Question 5: If you have children, how many kids to do you have?
53% of respondents have two kids. 20% have 3 kids, and 20% have 1 kid. 6.5% are expecting. Two intrepid respondents have more than six kids.
Question 6: What is the best book you’ve read recently? What was the best book you read while you were at Brown?
Answers to this question were all over the map, so we created a full best book listing. Many people professed not to remember anything they had read at Brown. The current books that came up the most often were “Eat, Pray, Love” by Elizabeth Gilbert, “Middlesex” by Jeffrey Eugenides, “A Thousand Splendid Suns” by Khaled Hosseini, “Freakonomics” by Steven D. Levitt and Stephen J. Dubner, “The Kite Runner” by Khaled Hosseini, “Blink” by Malcolm Gladwell, and “The Yiddish Policeman’s Union” by Michael Chabon.
Question 7: Who is your current favorite music artist? Who was your favorite music artist when you were at Brown?
Again, answers to this question were varied. It was interesting to see that many artists who were favorites back at Brown were also listed as favorites today: Bruce Springsteen, U2, The Police, Billy Joel, R.E.M., Stevie Wonder. Also, a lot of people picked the same artist as the answer to both questions. Who says that 80s music sucked? Here's the complete listing of the Class of 1991's favorite music artists.
Question 8: What's the best trip you've ever taken? What's your future dream destination?
Once again, responses were all over the map. (Groan.) They are too hard to summarize – so we compiled a full best trip listing.
Question 10: What are your main sources of satisfaction?
The vast majority of respondents to this question answered “family,” “work,” “friends,” or a combination of the three. Some people spoke specifically about what they enjoy about their work, such as teaching or making the world better. Many people specifically mentioned exercise or other outdoor activities. Finally, a few people chose where they live as a main source of satisfaction. Here’s a cross section of answers:
Question 10: What is the best thing you’ve done since graduation?
Most respondents answered either finding their life partner or having kids, or both. Other people mentioned career highlights. Here are some of the more unique responses we got:
Question 11: What is your biggest source of stress, and how do you manage it?
Unsurprisingly, most respondents alluded to the difficulty of achieving balance between work and personal life. Work is a major source of stress for many people, both substantively and because of the amount of time it takes. Time management, inability to get everything done, divorce, infertility/adoption – these also came up a lot. Several people also cited finances as a source of stress. As for how to manage: people turn to exercise, alcohol, ordering out, crying, or denial. Here are some of the responses that stood out:
Question 13: How is your life different from what you pictured it would be at this age, when you graduated from college?
These responses were the most interesting. Some people thought they’d be more settled at this point in their lives than they actually are, while others are surprised to find themselves married with kids. Some people thought they’d be better off financially at this age than they actually are, while others are surprised by how well they’re doing, money-wise. Some people mentioned that they never pictured themselves divorced, but that’s where they are. Others find it surprising that they are living in a particular part of the country or doing a particular job. Many people talked about parenthood – that they never thought they’d have kids, or they never expected the deep and profound ways in which having children has affected them or their lives. Some people said that when they were at Brown, they really couldn’t picture this stage of life at all.
Here are some of the best responses:
The point of all this is, the Class of 1991 is making its mark, doing great things, having lots of fabulous life experiences, and doing all this on our own terms, dammit. Just like dear ol’ Brown taught us to do…