But you can’t go for cheap to any of these top public of you don’t live in state. All of them charge as much as private schools for oos, with no merit. |
| High school rank as an “academic merit-signaling” variable has become meaningless over time as many/most schools no longer even calculate it. Its removal from the methodology is a good thing. SAT scores are a better calibration of incoming student quality/strength and for all top 10 schools the majority of students submitted SAT or ACT scores and the top 25 percentile numbers strongly signal high quality matriculating students. The mean scores are also very high. So, despite the grousing, USNWR DOES in fact measure incoming student body quality. Interesting to note that most of the privates with big moves in negative direction have ED2 and that is signaling something, perhaps slightly less strong academic ability. |
Michigan reports SAT 50% at 1350-1530. UVA reports at 1390- 1570. Michigan reports 50% ACT at 31-34. UVA at 32-35. So, yes, higher for UVA. The 75th percentil of last year's incoming class reports having a 4.53 GPA, a 35 ACT and a 1520, |
But they do cost $70,000 if you aren’t in state, so then you are paying the same for bigger classes and less credentialed faculty. |
| Penn State folks I know used to consider their school much more like U of Michigan than Mich State. It’s going to be tough to maintain that optimism with PSU tied with MSU. No smiles in Happy Valley today. |
Except the UC schools do not have test score (US News just counted their graduation rates at a higher percentage as a substitute). So they move up with both test scores and class rank (a surrogate for grades) removed as criteria. |
I'm a college counselor. This is false. Usually, instate Virginians go to Michigan as OOS public if they can't get into the Virginia school of their choice. UVA has a lower acceptance rate at 16.3 percent compared to Michigan at 22.9 percent. UVA has been ranked at 25 for a long time (now 24) and a top public Ivy for decades. The only reason it dropped on the public list from no. 3 to 5 is due to the Pell Grant factor which USNWR seems hung up on, but the Virginia colleges can control because Pell Grants are assessed after admissions. So long as that factor remains, UVA and other economically stronger states will be lower on the public school lists. Michigan also takes in 50% OOS because it needs to drive up its stats. UVA doesn't need to do that. And, finally, Michigan's stats are not as good as UVAs. Michigan's SAT 50% is 1350-1530 and ACT is at 31-34. UVA is higher in both categories at 1390-1570 and 32-35. And as to costs, the reasons that Virginians prefer in-state VA is because OOS Michigan is $76,295 a year and UVA is $36,316. |
You are out of touch. I happily paid over $500 an hour for test prep. It was worth every penny! My DC got a 36 and was 1 and done. |
You might want to get your eyes checked. It moved up from 25 to 24. |
it is currently ranked at No. 26. |
No it means Michigan is almost two times the size of UVA at 51,225 and it takes 50% OOS, so, yes, more students nationwide are going to apply to it. UVA is 17,000 students and takes only 26% OOS and international. They are applies and organges. |
You're seriously think so? Is there a past example of similar drops in ranking, followed by significant drops in apps? Honest, question. I find this whole ranking and prestige discussion fascinating. |
No, and besides its a top 25 National University out of hundreds. |
| Incredible, 32 pages of chest puffing |
| UVA fans need to relax. You had a nice run. But it’s over. You’re not neck and neck with Michigan & Berkeley. (Or even UNC, apparently.) You’re a nice, pretty, Southern public. The Ann Arbor campus is a sprawling academical CITY, and almost every ugly building houses a nationally ranked department. Quaint serpentine walls can only get you so far. |