That still doesn’t answer why the yield rate is so low for MD residents who apply to UVA. It’s obvious. Michigan is a top 20 school. There are no schools in Virginia that are even top 25. |
DP. Multiple top 10% kids at our HS, including my own, are applying ED to Michigan. |
Christ that’s what we are full pay at an Ivy. |
this is true at our nyc school. easily. |
I had to re-read that twice. I think PP was saying that the difference between UM and UMD is greater than the difference between UM and UVA b/c UVA is considered stronger than UVA. UM>UVA>UMD |
Probably comfort with the culture based upon the past experiences of people |
Yep. So it seems crazy to think 70 public school families would sign up for that tuition, given that Michigan gives virtually no aid to OOS students. I know there are plenty of public school families than can easily afford $85k+ a year—but 70 are willing to commit at ED? Especially when you consider that the instate school option is UVA? Come on. OP is full of it. |
Except for the painfully obvious fact that most kids aren’t getting into any Ivy. Perhaps it’s also a testament to the desires of wealthy families not to have their children attend UVA? If money is no object and you want to get your child into a top 20 school, why not ED to Michigan? |
Not everyone wants to go to the Ivies. And yes, DC was accepted. The Ivies are not known for their STEM. For example, Dartmouth Engineering degree is a BA and then an extra 9 courses to get a Bachelor of Engineering in a fifth year. Of the top ranked undergrad ChemE programs, Princeton is the only one ranked in top 10. UMich is number 8. Again, not everyone is dying to go to an Ivy. There’s a school for everyone. Glad your DC is happy at an Ivy. |
This is not fair to Michigan State University (and I am a Michigan grad). Michigan State is somewhat equivalent to VT. And it has academic programs that Michigan doesn't have. And really good merit. There are reasons why kids will pick MSU. |
and WMU won the NCAA Hockey Championship last year ... not sure the last time a school in VA competed for that |
| Of course a large percentage of Michigan's students have low SAT's. It is obligated to educated Michigan residents. A far different story than selective private schools. |
Only by USNWR and no other ranking service. Michigan has only 32 Rhodes scholars. UVA has 57 |
| While it's easier to get into UMich from in-state, they are about 50% OOS and they certainly don't take all students from the state. It's the top school in the state and the #3 public in the country. It's not full of low scoring students. Ridiculous. |
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Michigan has some powerhouse undergraduate programs with top 10 programs in math, engineering, computer science, nursing, theater, business. I've probably left some out. For kids interested in its top areas it's a strong choice with attractive options if they change their field of study. Michigan just has a wide breadth of different, stellar programs that UMD, UVA, VTech can't offer.
In other areas of study it's a solid competitor. |