JMU vs. Colby

Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:Colby!!!!!!!!!!

JMU is really just a VA/DMV school. I've always heard of Colby (not from this area) but I've never heard of JMU until I moved here. But I am a small liberal arts graduate so maybe it was in my orbit from when I applied to college. And then in law school, I knew lots of Colby grads. Didn't know any from JMU.


+1

If everything else is equal, this is all very true. I'm from NYC. Everyone from NJ and north knows Colby is a good school.

I had never heard of JMU until I moved to NoVa.


Right….because Colby is such a household name.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:Colby!!!!!!!!!!

JMU is really just a VA/DMV school. I've always heard of Colby (not from this area) but I've never heard of JMU until I moved here. But I am a small liberal arts graduate so maybe it was in my orbit from when I applied to college. And then in law school, I knew lots of Colby grads. Didn't know any from JMU.


Well, among the 20 or so graduates of my sorority alone in my grad year from JMU, two went to Georgetown and one to UVA for law school. I wonder how many from Colby got into those schools altogether that same year. You are ignorant when it comes to comparing universities. Colby is a joke, honestly. It's for wealthy private school kids who didn't get into top schools and think they're too good for JMU.


Damn. How do you even get a seatbelt on when you drove. That chip on your shoulder must be hell to navigate.

OP—
https://afa.colby.edu/outcomes/#:~:text=Colby%20is%20a%20springboard%2C&text=that%20help%20our%20graduates%20start,salary%20of%20more%20than%20%24100%2C000.


Those aren’t stats, they are mktg. Really want to compare outcomes, do it right.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:Op here. It is a tougher choice than I would have thought. If we were just looking at academic reputation in a vacuum, Colby is an easy choice. But it is also big vs. small school, isolated vs. close-enough to other things/big town. I am a bit of a reputation-snob myself but even I am struggling with advising DC. What they want as a major is offered at both. Sport would offer a friend-group at both.


The differential in acceptance rates tells you everything you need to know. If location was an issue, why did DC apply to Colby?!?


I’m quite certain you have no idea what you’re talking about.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:Op here. It is a tougher choice than I would have thought. If we were just looking at academic reputation in a vacuum, Colby is an easy choice. But it is also big vs. small school, isolated vs. close-enough to other things/big town. I am a bit of a reputation-snob myself but even I am struggling with advising DC. What they want as a major is offered at both. Sport would offer a friend-group at both.


The differential in acceptance rates tells you everything you need to know. If location was an issue, why did DC apply to Colby?!?


What does acceptance rate tell us?


That Colby is tiny.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:Op here. It is a tougher choice than I would have thought. If we were just looking at academic reputation in a vacuum, Colby is an easy choice. But it is also big vs. small school, isolated vs. close-enough to other things/big town. I am a bit of a reputation-snob myself but even I am struggling with advising DC. What they want as a major is offered at both. Sport would offer a friend-group at both.


The differential in acceptance rates tells you everything you need to know. If location was an issue, why did DC apply to Colby?!?


What does acceptance rate tell us?


It tells you something about the quality of the student body. JMU’s acceptance rate is over 80 percent. Colby’s is below 10 percent. The SAT/ACT and GPA figures are vastly different too.


Indiana has a 90 percent acceptance rate and lower SAT than JMU but I would send DD there for business over JMU and your dying SLAC in a heartbeat
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:Op here. It is a tougher choice than I would have thought. If we were just looking at academic reputation in a vacuum, Colby is an easy choice. But it is also big vs. small school, isolated vs. close-enough to other things/big town. I am a bit of a reputation-snob myself but even I am struggling with advising DC. What they want as a major is offered at both. Sport would offer a friend-group at both.


The differential in acceptance rates tells you everything you need to know. If location was an issue, why did DC apply to Colby?!?


What does acceptance rate tell us?


It tells you something about the quality of the student body. JMU’s acceptance rate is over 80 percent. Colby’s is below 10 percent. The SAT/ACT and GPA figures are vastly different too.


JMU is much larger, so acceptance rate is an ineffective comparison tool. Acceptance rates can also be gamed in an effort to manipulate rankings.
colby accepts the vast majority of their students early so they can claim higher yield and lower acceptance. It’s a game.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:Op here. It is a tougher choice than I would have thought. If we were just looking at academic reputation in a vacuum, Colby is an easy choice. But it is also big vs. small school, isolated vs. close-enough to other things/big town. I am a bit of a reputation-snob myself but even I am struggling with advising DC. What they want as a major is offered at both. Sport would offer a friend-group at both.


The differential in acceptance rates tells you everything you need to know. If location was an issue, why did DC apply to Colby?!?


What does acceptance rate tell us?


It tells you something about the quality of the student body. JMU’s acceptance rate is over 80 percent. Colby’s is below 10 percent. The SAT/ACT and GPA figures are vastly different too.


JMU is much larger, so acceptance rate is an ineffective comparison tool. Acceptance rates can also be gamed in an effort to manipulate rankings.


You can’t be this ignorant. What does the size of the school have to do with its acceptance rate? JMU’s acceptance rate is 78%. Colby’s is under 10%.

In terms of size, Cornell University has about 5K kids in its 2027 class which is the same number as JMU’s class of 2027. Cornell’s acceptance rate is 8%. Please explain how acceptance rates are gamed to account for a 70 point difference.



You are not seriously comparing Colby to an Ivy are you?
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:Op here. It is a tougher choice than I would have thought. If we were just looking at academic reputation in a vacuum, Colby is an easy choice. But it is also big vs. small school, isolated vs. close-enough to other things/big town. I am a bit of a reputation-snob myself but even I am struggling with advising DC. What they want as a major is offered at both. Sport would offer a friend-group at both.


The differential in acceptance rates tells you everything you need to know. If location was an issue, why did DC apply to Colby?!?


What does acceptance rate tell us?


It tells you something about the quality of the student body. JMU’s acceptance rate is over 80 percent. Colby’s is below 10 percent. The SAT/ACT and GPA figures are vastly different too.


JMU is much larger, so acceptance rate is an ineffective comparison tool. Acceptance rates can also be gamed in an effort to manipulate rankings.
colby accepts the vast majority of their students early so they can claim higher yield and lower acceptance. It’s a game.


A “game”? What kind of game ? To what objective?

How is that different from other colleges?
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:Colby alum.
Give it serious consideration. It's an amazing place where all classes are taught by professors, not grad students.
Have you visited? The campus is amazing. The new athletic center is world-class. The new science buildings are fabulous. The new dorms/housing options - phenomenal.
Colby has poured huge money into the town of Waterville, and the town/gown effect has improved dramatically.
yes, Maine is cold in the winter. But it's also beautiful and the community there is wonderful.

What's the sport?


What is with this hyperbolic gushing over a tiny, remote school in the middle of nowhere? And again - “world class”? I mean, come on.


So sorry your kid didn't get in.


Good luck explaining to people how Colby is world class.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:Colby if you are or aspire to be UMC. JMU is LMC.


Colby if you want to wok at starbucks.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:This is a classic D1 at a fairly mediocre school vs D3 at a highly rated LAC. If finances are not an issue, there’s not much of a choice here - career options will be night and day. We had a similar choice and attending a NESCAC, playing sport has worked out very well for our DD.


Cite?


Average Colby graduate salary >85k. Average JMU graduate salary - 65k. Multiple Wall Street firms recruit from Colby, none do at JMU
Even if not just about starting salary - Colby law school acceptance rate 87%, Med School 68% - both miles above national average. Career wise, it’s not even in the same zipcode. A lot of people get caught up in “going D1” though.


Where was this data retrieved? Were the salaries controlled for household wealth?


Uh no, Colby is not a WS feeder.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:Op here. It is a tougher choice than I would have thought. If we were just looking at academic reputation in a vacuum, Colby is an easy choice. But it is also big vs. small school, isolated vs. close-enough to other things/big town. I am a bit of a reputation-snob myself but even I am struggling with advising DC. What they want as a major is offered at both. Sport would offer a friend-group at both.


The differential in acceptance rates tells you everything you need to know. If location was an issue, why did DC apply to Colby?!?


What does acceptance rate tell us?


It tells you something about the quality of the student body. JMU’s acceptance rate is over 80 percent. Colby’s is below 10 percent. The SAT/ACT and GPA figures are vastly different too.


JMU is much larger, so acceptance rate is an ineffective comparison tool. Acceptance rates can also be gamed in an effort to manipulate rankings.
colby accepts the vast majority of their students early so they can claim higher yield and lower acceptance. It’s a game.


A “game”? What kind of game ? To what objective?

How is that different from other colleges?


Georgetown accepts the same percentage early and regular as an example.
Anonymous
According to Payscale they are not that different-70k early for JMU and 72k early for Colby.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:According to Payscale they are not that different-70k early for JMU and 72k early for Colby.

https://www.payscale.com/college-salary-report/bachelors?search=Colby
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:Op here. It is a tougher choice than I would have thought. If we were just looking at academic reputation in a vacuum, Colby is an easy choice. But it is also big vs. small school, isolated vs. close-enough to other things/big town. I am a bit of a reputation-snob myself but even I am struggling with advising DC. What they want as a major is offered at both. Sport would offer a friend-group at both.


The differential in acceptance rates tells you everything you need to know. If location was an issue, why did DC apply to Colby?!?


What does acceptance rate tell us?


It tells you something about the quality of the student body. JMU’s acceptance rate is over 80 percent. Colby’s is below 10 percent. The SAT/ACT and GPA figures are vastly different too.


JMU is much larger, so acceptance rate is an ineffective comparison tool. Acceptance rates can also be gamed in an effort to manipulate rankings.
colby accepts the vast majority of their students early so they can claim higher yield and lower acceptance. It’s a game.


+1
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