VT is not a safety for CS with those stats. Glad your kid is happy. |
3.9W, 3.7UW, test optional. Applied undecided Liberal Arts. |
Of course, public universities in themselves are a sort of social engineering. Make education more widely available to the population in the hopes that it improves society as a result. As for those VT scattergrams, they are obviously pulling some particular levers to build their class. But they also have different schools within the university that have different admissions profiles. Kids who were rejected from the college of engineering might have similar (or better) stats compared to a student accepted to the college of arts and sciences. VT also tends to fill most of their class, particularly in engineering, through EA, so kids who might have been accepted EA were rejected RD. All of that can make for noisy Naviance data compared to a school that is more standardized across the board (I don't know if UVA fits that profile or not). |
| Last year’s EA acceptance rate was almost 77%. Feeling positive! |
How is pp being a Karen. PP said state schools should be accessible to all state residents, meaning all SES, etc., including first-gen students. That's definitely not being a Karen. PP obviously did not mean that there should be enough seats for every single person who applies
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Shouldn't a state U reflect its state population demographics in its admissions at least a little bit? |
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EA decisions are coming out tomorrow @ 5PM - confirmed
https://twitter.com/juanmorehokie/status/1494456614446903300?s=21 |
Ugh it's the "I know everyone hates writing so that's why we have 4 short essays" guy. No, not everyone hates writing, and some people think that colleges should aspire to greatness rather than mediocrity. |
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Interesting article on this year's applicants
https://vtx.vt.edu/articles/2022/01/ua-2022Applications.html |