Just looked at their data and it's actually exactly 80% at Berkeley & Santa Barbara, 79% at UCLA, Davis, San Diego. Lowest in-state % is Irvine, 76%, and that goes along with a high % international not US OOS students. The less-desirable UCs are all higher in-state % (90%+) https://www.universityofcalifornia.edu/about-us/information-center/freshman-admissions-summary Regardless, if you want VA to be California then you need to lobby the state legislature to better fund VA universities and set caps on OOS admissions. Right now, the universities have figured out the % they need to be majority VA students but also have the funding they need since VA doesn't fund state Us very well. And, any VA student can go to a public college it just may not be their first choice. |
Michigan is absolutely a backup for a small group of students rejected from UVa. High stats NoVa STEM students who are full pay. True for over a decade. |
That is absolutely true. Just ask how many TJ students withdraw their UM applications after getting into UVA. This story happens every year with no end in sight. But TJ kids love to have UMich as their back-up alternative, which is not bad at all. |
UVA and W&M have had space limitations for years, making difficult to expand. VT had been filling that supply gap by admitting more folks who wanted to attend the flagship troika of schools. Now that VT has stopped filling that Virginia demand by taking more OOS and embarking on FGLI and URM initiatives and responding to the overenrollment shock, the supply of slots from the troika available to NOVA and Richmond students has gone down. If your DC doesn't like JMU/VCU/GMU as an alternative, then OOS publics beckon and if you have the $ they are desirable. But for many here, $ is a consideration and so cue the complaints about the UVA/W&M/VT troika. |
This is very true, not just STEM. It was true at my Fairfax Co HS back in the late 80s/90. High performance kids chose Ann Arbor as a back-up to UVA. |
The college landscape and admissions have changed a lot since the late 80s/90s. Michigan is very difficult to get into, as is UVA in-state and OOS, and when you say something is a backup - it means something that is viewed like a safety - and Michigan certainly is not. A top student can get into one and not the other -- and there is little predictability. |
Imagine that? Instate TJ students decide to go to instate UVA instead of OOS Michigan! Who’d have thunk it? Your argument is lame. |
They should be, though. It's like that in other states. |
Thirty to forty years ago? You seriously expect anyone to care what happened last century? |
It’s only a backup if they get in. |
It's always been this way. Period. Point: this isn't new. UMich was always a UVA backup for high-performing in-state VA students who can afford it. |
Always? I think you’re living in the past. In the meantime in Michigan, UVA was never used as a backup. No need to when the local product was superior. |
Especially since Virginia is not a mega state like California, Floria, or Texas. |
| OP here. DD has several great options with good merit at several OOS public flagships. Michigan would be tough to swing as an OOS with no merit. We won’t be eligible for financial aid. |
Yeah, that’s always the problem with the very top publics. Best of luck! |