VCU, GMU and VT are better (as are WM and UVA). |
I do not know of any VA public U which takes more than about 1/3 OOS. VT, UVa, and W&M all have agreements with the Commonwealth limiting OOS to about 1/3 of ugrads. Viewed nationally, this 1/3 OOS is not an unusually high OOS percentage. The schools need those full-pay OOS because they lose money on every full-pay in-state student. UVa and W&M are smaller than several other public Universities in VA. The "big state U" in VA might be either VT (VT for non-Engineering is a much easier admit than Engineering) or GMU -- at least by number of undergrads. |
This. Cousins in California could not get accepted into any UC campus despite having SATs 1550 or higher, excellent grades, hard courses in HS, and from a highly rated / challenging HS (Gunn in PA). Ended up going to OOS private, then they went through Med School, also out of state. |
This thread is so entertaining. VA has more great instate colleges than most states. There is something for everyone. Virginians are very, very lucky. |
What's the difference between being a commuter at UMD vs. a commuter at Mason for most students? Not sure what OP is complaining about. |
Really? No difference? |
DP. What would the difference be if you're comparing commuter students? |
You are shortchanging JMU. Here is a current list of undergraduate institutions of PhD recipients. For Chemistry, JMU is ahead of UVA and #7 in the Southeast, ahead of schools like Georgia Tech and the University of Georgia. https://www.highereddatastories.com/2023/10/u...ons-of-doctoral.html |
Who is getting in if not a kid like this? Or are there just too many kids like this? |
A Virginia resident is going to pay a LOT more than that for any other “Top 50” school. After you look at enough OOS schools with a sticker price over $300k, I’m thinking that $150k for VT is a screaming deal. |
Aren’t the UC schools test blind? So the 1550 would be irrelevant. |
The PP says the kids in question have already gone through med school, so they would have applied to undergrad back when scores were required. |
Nicely done. Tired of the shortchanging of JMU with no data. |
I'm revisiting this because, this year again, I see many highly qualified Northern Virginia kids going out of state or "settling" for their 2nd/3rd/4th choice mainly or partially because they were rejected or waitlisted at their top Virginia choices (anecdotal evidence, but still...).
Do people still think Virginia parents are lucky to have such good options? I think some OOS kids at UVA/VT engineering should feel lucky instead. |
Yes. Many states have zero public schools that are comparable to UVA/W&M/VT, or they have one that is equivalent instead of three. And Virginia’s in-state numbers are well within the norm and probably even a bit higher than average. Is everything perfect? No. Could it be improved? Yes. But I would rather have these potential options than what a lot of other places have. |