I missed the part about them being local. I'd do one of the UVA combos. I don't think any of the schools in the DC area fit the categories of flagship, football, or an SLAC. The schools are either urban or primarily commuter schools. I'd go a little farther out. |
Dear Lord |
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Having attended a 30K state flagship myself -- and spent genuine time at a dozen more for D1 football weekends -- I think I'd skip UMCP as the first introduction and head straight to UVA for the vibing. I also attended UMCP for a 2nd career degree though as a 40 something.
It's not that UMD wouldn't feel like a state school once you were -inside- the student union, or walking the hall of Dorm ABC. I'm sure it does. It's just that it's so incoherent and splayed out and spanning a too-big number of acres cut off by major high speed roads. Even UCLA and the Ohio State feel more cohesive at their core than UMD. If my mom took me to "walk" around UMCP as my first exposure to a big state school, I'd inwardly think WTF and pass |
You don’t think UMD meets the criteria of a large flagship with football? |
? What? we haven’t started this process yet but I’d definitely rather figure out that my kid hates the SLAC feel an hour from home vs. after flying to New England… |
Agree with this. UMD obviously is a super easy local visit, but it makes a pretty lousy first (surface-level, I'm not hating on the substance of the school) first impression of the "type." Penn State (for huge) or UVA (less huge) make much better first impressions for the "type." |
| WVU, Dickinson, Gettysburg |
+1 good example of a rural-setting LAC (which is a lot of them). For the big research university/big football/college town setting (which UMD is not), I think JMU is the best nearby example. |
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GWU - urban school that is integrated with the surrounding city (aka NYU)
American Uni - suburban school with defined campus (aka Uni of Denver) Catholic - catholic school with defined campus and near some city stuff Georgetown - defined campus with that New England college feel (aka many North East schools) University of Maryland - similar to almost any large state university I am sure there are more but I know a number of people who visited these schools to help their DC narrow down some options. MD too big or great vibe, GWU not the campus feel they want or right in the middle of the action, Georgetown that "college" feel seen in the movies, and so on. |
What you don't like all that construction?? |
| We hit UVA, W&M and VCU/UR as our first ones to give the general ideas. We (parents) met at W&M so kids have been there lots and we have family in Richmond so VCU/UR were also easy to do. So really only UVA was an extra step and teen narrowed preferences from there. |
Two different states. There are other colleges LAC or not in MD to pair with UMD |
I love JMU, but it’s not R1. |
| Another Maryland LAC is St. Mary’s of Maryland. I’ve got a kid there and it’s a nice place to visit (it is small, rural, and on the water front in a historic site). |
What major roadS? Route 1/Baltimore? There's a lot of developments closer to the CP metro but the rest of the campus is pretty much on the other side of Route 1 and University Blvd. The campus has quads (library area for ex.) like most other universities. There are smaller lanes for vehicles within campus but campus is not cut off by major roads. |