OMG! How about speaking English? What is BIG? I have lived in the US for 25 years and I don’t have an f-big clue what you are trying to say. English is my first language btw. Surely I’m not the only one that needs an actual plain English translator to understand the college process? |
They want kids from wide range of counties. Their AOs have said, "We are not the University of Montgomery County."
If you have high scores, submit them. But you are not dinged if you go TO. They do want high GPA and around 1,000 of the kids who have stats for the Ivy League. These 1,000 or so get into the honors program. These extremely high stats kids usually end up on honors BUT you can be high stats and not get into honors due to lack of room or maybe they want a CS major and your kid is a business major or vice versa. I attended UMD. One of my freshman year friends transferred to Yale in the spring semester... They want variety. They don't want a school or honors program or LLC of just two majors or one or two parts of the state or just students from Maryland. They want kids in band with musical talents. They want kids who can act in the theater program. They want talented CS majors and business majors. They definitely want people in the AGNR school. They want students who have spirit and like football games. They want diversity and seem to like students from India because there's around 1,000 per year that are accepted or attend...can't remember which. They want student who are ready to contribute to the UMD life and culture in some way or other. UMD has some faults but they do seem to hire people who are willing to fix problems, and that's important in any large organization. |
I don't know what that person is saying but B1G is the Big Ten conference, which really has around 17 teams in it now. Those teams are spread across the country. UMD will basically never win a football championship because they are in a league now with Michigan. I don't care but some do. But that person must really be a bot because they wrote gibberish. |
The people who have said that how hard it is to get into UMD depends what major you are applying for are dead wrong. UMD first admits students to the school without consideration of their major. Once the student is admitted, their applications are then considered by the specific school with their major. If the student applies to a limited enrollment program like engineering, for example, they might get in as a direct admit to engineering or they will be put into Letters and Sciences. If they are put in L &S, they can take the gateway classes to make them eligible to transfer into the engineering school, or biology or the other limited enrollment programs. Note that it will be much more difficult to transfer into the computer science major starting next fall. So if students don’t get directly admitted into CS, the likelihood of being able to transfer in after gateway classes will be much slimmer than in the past.
|
+1 I heard a podcast were one of the AO's said that they recalculate the GPA and use weighted, when available. |
Seems like the surest way to get into UMD is to transfer from community college. Everyone I know who was rejected when applying in HS who then decided to go to community college first were successful when applying for a transfer to UMD. Even those who were not standouts in high school at all. |
That may be true but I've also heard that a very high number of CC transfers who get in later bomb out because they aren't adequately prepared. |
My org chem professor at UMD and Montgomery College was the same person. Montgomery college has excellent teachers, amazing labs, and great opportunities for students who want to learn. There was no difference in the level of preparation between UMD and MoCo. The classes in Moco are smaller and professors are more accessible. It’s an amazing option for those dead set on UMD who did not get in. |
+1 MoCo has some great teachers. It’s a great launching pad to UMD. |
This appears to be because students end up satisfied with the other university, not that they are rejected by UMD-CP a second time. |
You don’t need to understand this post to understand the college process. PO is venting and using signifiers of state culture to do so. It’s a but exclusionary if you don’t know Maryland very well, but your response is rude. |
This is how UMD decides. I will say that don't want the University of MOCO and HOCO and if your kid is at a top 10 public school in the state they are competing with their high school classmates for a spot. |
Perhaps in your experience but the stats indicate a vast disparity and disconnect. The majority of CC transfers don't graduate. |
The first level of competition is from within your student's high school. UMD typically takes 50% of the students applying from a particular high school. So your student has to be a standout from their high school first and foremost. They will also have spots for freshman connection - a spring start - although you can start in the Fall and live on campus.
https://reports.umd.edu/ |
I wonder how this would work for a kid who has been placed out of the majority of gateway classes. For example, I have a kid at Blair SMCS. They have 5's on both Calc BC and AP CS. They are taking discrete math and linear algebra so should be able to test out of those too. They are currently juniors, so this is hypothetical, and I'd imagine they'd be admitted. I'm mostly just curious. |