| Based on all the college tours we've been attending, I think most kids graduate in 6 years - that's the stat admissions officers are sharing (98% of students graduate within 6 years). |
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I'd be very wary of sending a kid to a university that didn't have at least an 85 percent 4 year graduation rate, regardless of whether a kid was red-shirted.
But I would assume the red-shirted students are overwhelmingly special needs, so a 5 or 6 year time year horizon may be more realistic for the red-shirt population. |
| What? It takes most people at least 4 years, so I'm not sure what you are on about? |
Many students at elite universities are “special needs” these days, some are 40-50%. Yet the 4 yr graduation rates are high. So your assumption seems off trying to connect special needs to graduation rates. |
The only way you could have a 20-year-old high school senior is by holding back a winter/spring kid twice or a summer/fall kid thrice. However, it’s only fall kids who are considered for redshirting. They start school a year late and they’re never held back again. So a redshirted student will start their senior year of high school at 17 and turn 18 shortly after. But at no point during the year will they turn 19, let alone 20. |
Actually most people take 5 years. |
| No doubt the OP of this ridiculous thread is the same poster who carries her grudge against red-shirted kids throughout this site. |
| I have no idea what the original question means! |
Agree. OP makes no sense. |
This is one of the most useless, dumb posts on dcum this week. Tell us about yourself. |
Inaccurate. My son was not redshirted- turns 18 shortly after senior year start. Redshirted are usually SUMMER birthdays and are 18 when school starts. Maryland & PA- k cutoff is Sept 1 DC & Virginia- k cutoff is Sept 30 But yes, there aren’t going to be 20 year old HS seniors without being held back multiple times. |
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I hate it when people throw out statistics without any context. It varies by institution type (public schools, private nonprofit schools, for-profit schools). Typically, private non-profit has higher 4 year graduation rates, followed by public, and for-profit has the lowest 4 year graduation rate. Commuter campuses also have lower 4 year rates, since they attract students that have full time jobs and were never on a 4 year plan to begin with. Also, it varies by major. Much easier to graduate on time (or early) with a history degree than an engineering or computer science degree. Some frequently mentioned colleges on DCUM:
Yale has a 90% 4 year graduation rate. Georgetown is 89% Washington and Lee University is 89% University of Virginia is 85% Vanderbilt University is 85% Villanova University is 85% Johns Hopkins is 82% George Washington University is 76% Juniata College is 73% Carnegie Mellon University is 69% James Madison University is 67% University of Maryland: College Park is 64% Penn State University Park is 62% https://www.bestcolleges.com/research/college-graduation-rates/ |
| I think op's red shirt was from blood dripping out of the artery that was supposed to feed her brain. |
| I'm guessing that OP is thinking about those people who brag about their kid going to college with one or two years of credits and graduating early. |
Red shirting has nothing to do with that.
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