Science majors are doing fine with positions and not just science teachers. Don’t believe those lies. |
OP here. Did you consider the size? Undergraduate Enrollment W&M: 6800 UVA: 17,500 VT: 30,400 Total: 54,700 Arizona State: 65,500 Arizona: 40,400 Michigan: 33,700 MSU: 39,200 IU: 35,600 Purdue: 38,000 I won’t say VA is better than IN or AZ. Also, if I understand correctly the soft cap for OOS admission is about 33 percent. Many OOS kids apply to UVa and W&M so the admission rate of OOS kids is lower for these two. But the admission rate for OOS is much higher at VT and JMU |
Look at the acceptance rate:
VT in-state: 50% VT OOS: 63% JMU in-state: 71% JMU OOS: 87% |
Here's what's shocking to me. Yes, we have some wonderful "state" universities but our "in-state" tuition & fees (not room & board or extras) are rather eye-opening.
Compare state flagships (I'll let UVA slide in on this one) for engineering: UVA ($26,152/yr, first 3 years) VT ($15,478/yr, freshman-on campus, not incl housing) vs our adjacent states: Kentucky ($13,212/yr) UMD ($14,535/yr) NCSU ($9,105/yr) Tennessee ($13,484/yr) WVU ($11,160/yr) ** This was just a quick data search, may not be exactly apples-to-apples but I tried, and I did not see specific add-ons for engineering at UK, NCSU, or UT. UMD is within ~$1K of VT....but the others are several thousand dollars less Tech per year. Now, you might want to argue rankings and such...and the at least ~10K+ difference over a degree program...is "worth it" for a "better" school, but all of them turn out fine engineers. And many of the top engineering schools (like UC-Berkeley, Purdue, GA Tech, Texas and Texas A&M) all have low in-state rates too. I can't figure out why Virginia's top-3 (Tech, UVa, W&M) are so much more expensive for Virginians. Maybe it's made up with cheaper housing/board options but those vary so widely based on need and preference that it's truly hard to compare quickly. When all-in easily floats up over $150,000, and realistically is closer to $175K! for a public and in-state degree (and that's IF your kid can do that engineering in four years) -- it'll really make you question what's going on. |
No, because everyone here is only concerned about quality |
Nope. There are plenty of other good schools in VA, beyond these three. Deal with it. DP |
Totally agree, just wanted the PP to list any sources that could possibly back up her absurd opinion. She couldn't - grad school rankings don't count. JMU is a fine place to earn a degree - in a wide variety of majors/fields. |
The Virginia state legislature didn't fund higher ed well to start with and also cuts funding year after year. ![]() ![]() |
I don't think the absurd OP has returned. I accidentally posted the grad school rankings, and I'm not OP. Someone did post future PhD percentage, which is one factor. Anybody else have an opinion on how JMU ranks in the hard sciences as compared to other VA state schools? |
Of note, W&M is ranked at #15 in total, well ahead of VT , UVA, and UMD (and JMU) despite being much smaller. When adjusted for size, W&M is the highest ranked national public university. |
What? There are 12 public universities ranked ahead of W&M in this ranking. No one is "adjusting for size." ![]() |
If you are doing an eye roll, why don't you roll them over to the right side of the top feeder schools we page, where there is an "adjusted" rank. In it, W&M is ranked 30. No other national public university makes the top 50. If you don't want to do that, and just want to focus on the overall totals, you can see that W&M is tied with the University of Texas at Austin and Penn State. The undergraduate enrollments of UT and Penn State are both 6.1X that of that of W&M. |
No. Every one of those 12 public universities has an enrollment three times as large as W&M. (UNC is the closes at 3X.) If you do the math, W&M has a much higher "PhD Productivity" based on size than any of those schools. There are two privates above W&M, Cornell and Chicago, and both of them also have undergraduate enrollment higher than W&M. If you do the math, W&M also has a higher chemistry PhD Productivity than those two schools. There is a ranking adjusted for size on on the right side. https://www.collegetransitions.com/dataverse/top-feeders-phd-programs#chemistry |
Somebody has had too many hot toddy’s tonight. Nobody is calling W&M the highest public ranked National University. Cmon now. |
Why don't you actually read the post before you spout off? |