It never amazes me just how MEAN and spiteful people on DCUM can be. I also think ruling out a school for that reason is rather foolish, but to each his own. |
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I have learned that there are very bright students at the flagship public college in every state.
My kid was offered a scholarship to Minnesota that would have made costs very similar to being in-state in VaTech and less than UVA/William and Mary (no money offered in state). Classmates received good very generous scholarships from Ohio State, Clemson, South Carolina, Kentucky, Alabama, Tennessee, Mississippi, etc. A lot of these kids wanted to be a school with an avid sports culture. |
Surprised you are saying this about Auburn. Huge number of applications this year and it is definitely a nationally known school. The local Virginia schools you mention will just draw a blank look anywhere else in the country (maybe not JMU in some cases, but definitely Christopher Newport) |
DP. I don’t know about CNU, but JMU has a huge alumni network, across the country (and in London). https://www.alumni.jmu.edu/s/1591/18/interior.aspx?sid=1591&gid=3&pgid=7560 |
Even if Minnesota (a fine school) or Tennessee, for example, offers a scholarship that would make them cheaper than UVA, your kid would still be better served going to UVA if she or he wants a job on the East Coast or in the Mid-Atlantic -- more connections and stronger reputation. |
Source? |
Not so much anymore. DP |
Same. I have one at Auburn on scholarship and it’s been great. Definitely prefer to CNU or JMU. Different strokes. |
I lived in Lawrence. Most college towns are liberal. Kansas as a whole is not and it serves the state. |
If you want to think that recruiters from Bain Consulting, Morgan Stanley, Amazon, etc. value a degree from the University of Tennessee just as much as a degree from UVA (all other things- GPA, interview presentation, etc. - being equal), you go right ahead. |
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My high school grad is off to Virginia Tech very shortly. Go ahead and apply. It is worth trying, VT is a great option. For my kid, it came down to JMU vs. VT and kid didn't apply far and wide. The goal was always to stay in state.
Your kid is a junior, right? Things could look a lot different in a year in terms of covid. So don't close any doors, don't take anything off the table. Apply in state here and there. You don't know if you don't try! |
I don't care where he goes to school then. The boy lacks judgment. |
Interesting anecdote. Is there data to support this claim? |
| OP's son is a rising junior. For him to have already decided that he doesn't want to go to a college that has a vaccine requirement, even a "rolled back" one, means that his mother is a crazy anti-vaxer who brainwashed him. I have no interest in assisting idiots. It's no wonder he already knows he has to start looking beyond the top VA schools because he isn't smart enough to get into one. |
I’m a parent-age person from the Midwest. I don’t have any recent experience with the University of Kansas, but people in the Midwest think of it as being a wonderful school. Maybe a rung down from UVa, UNC, the University of Texas and Michigan, and half a rung down from Ohio State, the University of Wisconsin and the University of Indiana. My sense is that the University of Iowa is at the same level as KU, and that the University of Oklahoma, the University of Missouri and the University of Alabama are about half a rung below KU and Iowa. KU is in a cute, liberal, cosmopolitan town that’s a short drive from Kansas City. Conservative kids can certainly find their people there, but my feeling is that it’s probably comparable to Virginia Tech, in terms of politics, and a much more liberal place than most Midwestern or deep South state universities. For students who know they’ll stay in Virginia, going to a place like Old Dominion or James Madison might work better, but, all other things being equal, KU or the University of Iowa would probably be a better choice for students who could end up living outside the Mid-Atlantic region. |