| If you were in VA would you pick JMU, GMU or Pitt? |
Yes, of course. US News 22 ugrad engineering = VTech #13, PSU 21, Uva 36, Pitt 56, George Mason 86 The topic of this post was in response to pp re National VS Regional universities... and who has heard of what school once you leave the local area. The engineering rankings changed somewhat, but did not "jump" JMU into the national scene. |
Where does student want to work? Local? GMU. Other cities outside of the area? Pitt. |
| Prefer to work in the DC metro area. Need to choose from those 3 schools but GMU is too close to home so it is between JMU and Pitt. |
Totally disagree. Perhaps for engineering - but I would much rather my kid go to JMU for liberal arts rather than Pitt. |
Perhaps for like all degrees. Unless you kids never leaves the greater Va area. |
What? Two of my kids have gotten humanities degrees from JMU and are employed in other states. You must not get out much. DP |
My kid chose Pitt in this scenario. |
Mine JMU in this scenario. |
| I think JMU is a strong school in the DC metro area that attracts good companies. |
GMU for engineering. JMU for everything else. |
+1 It definitely is. |
DP: I don't think you are understanding the concept of liberal arts. There are no "liberal arts" majors. History, Math, Chemistry, Biology, Physics, English, Philosophy, Psychology, Sociology --they are all majors in a liberal arts program. Engineering is often treated like an applied specialty not a core discipline. That's why there's a school of Engineering, and a School of Arts and Sciences--the latter being where the math physics, chemistry are housed. |
| I think JMU Engineering would still attract good companies from the DC area. Not sure how much better than Pitt. |
+1. People are just so massively insecure. It makes for great threads.
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