| As a side note you people do realize that UMW and GM were both colleges which were part of UVA until the early 1970's right? |
? Your point? The "early 70's" were 40 years ago. Today's students and applicants weren't even born then |
Who cares? |
Just looking at the grades and scores of admitted students, sir or ma'am. |
Then you understand there's a range, just as there's a range at UVA. The perfect 4.5GPA at UVA rubs shoulders with a 3.2 kid too. |
So FCPS weighted GPA us the number used for in state applications/admissions?!? |
From the looks of Naviance, yes. But other districts may not. This is all noted in the school profile sent to all colleges. Colleges are used to getting both weighted and unweighted and adjust accordingly. It's not a big deal. |
No. You forgot the 102 students from foreign countries at UVA. and the students from almost of 50 states (= more diversity). http://www.cavalierdaily.com/article/2016/03/university-releases-admission-decisions-for-class-of-2020 |
Also the selectivity stats. UMW is at 76.6% accept. W & L is at 17%. UMW is state and only $26K a year inclusive. W&L is extremely expensive, very pretty, very Greek. |
Rarely. 93% of the incoming class of 2020 were in the top 10% of their class |
So if my high school sophomore has a 2.8 unweighted/3.0 weighted GPA after freshman year/5 honors courses in an FCPS high school, and is scoring As and Bs as a sophomore (3 honors courses) so far this year (possible 3.06 u/w and 3.3 weighted at end of sophomore year), so the best he can hope for after junior year (3 APs 1 honors) is 3.34 u/w and 3.67 weighted, are the in-state options limited to Radford and ODU due to the possible 3.34 u/w GPA? Or do we use the weighted GPA to look at in-state options, knowing other districts may not use weighted GPA? |
FCPS does not rank. How can a parent or student determine if in top 10% of the class? |
| How about considering some out of state state schools? Some aren't any more expensive than in state. |
I didn't forget anything but thanks for the details |
Slippery Rock in PA Maybe Ohio University in Athens, OH? That's about it, I believe. |