| If you want JMU public is the way to go |
Public FCPS. |
| Contrary to what one of the previous posters said, JMU does not track demonstrated interest. |
Did your kid engage directly with a recruiter over email? In person? Did your kid visit (officially) and engage? Despite another poster saying JMU doesn’t track interest, I think they do. And given the big interest in certain southern schools, I think everyone is trying to do a better job of yield protection. My kid got into every school where he demonstrated an interest—primarily through multiple interactions with the recruiter. |
Can we please fact check before spouting wrong info? Page 10 of CDS: https://www.jmu.edu/pair/ir/common-data-set/cds2024/cds_2024-2025.pdf Level of applicants interest: Considered |
Stop. Public schools don’t use demonstrated interest of yield protection. |
Back up this claim. I’ll be waiting for your cite. |
I don’t know about yield protection, but demonstrated interest is a category on each school’s CDS. JMU checks the considered box. As does another public school I’ve looked at (AppState) https://analytics.appstate.edu/dash_cds_all_years Google is your friend, keyboard warriors! |
| My son did not get in several years ago — 3.85, 1480. But it was fine. He’s a senior now at an OOS flagship and totally kicking a$$. |
They must be more desperate than I thought. Demonstrated interest is a third tier practice. |
And yet: associated with Georgia Tech and Carnegie Mellon . . . . Rethink. |
Not impressive |
| William and Mary tracks demonstrated interest. Not “third tier”, whatever that means. |
Tufts and Kenyon track interest. I wouldn’t consider those third tier either. But the poster just wanted to stir up some drama. |
But they’re quirky |