Wait, is this like UVA Wise?? |
Also see: Towson and Frostburg! |
I have heard that GMU has great instruction in Cyber Security. Many professors there are also industry professionals. GMU also ranks very highly socio economic advancement scale. Seems to be a great choice for many. |
ASU has some very high achieving students and great programs for students who are independent and invested! |
Yes, these states built colleges big enough to handle the demand. That’s smart, not lax. |
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A few schools that we liked that might be worth exploring:
Duquesne St. Joes Hobart |
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The difference between schools like Duquesne, GMU, & VCU and schools like Arizona, Kansas, Nebraska, Mississippi, Oklahoma, & Iowa is that the latter are in states in which not a lot of people are sitting around studying the USNews rankings. They often see elite private colleges as a waste of money, so many of even the best students are happy to attend the U of ____ or _____ State U.
So in Va, Pa,Mass, NJ, NY etc the top students are fighting to get in Ivies & Stanford /Chicago/MIT etc. They are usually not happy about attending their own state schools like UMass, Rutgers, SUNY and so on. They are even less happy about attending their in-state publics which accept 80+%. The bottom line is if you go to U of Arizona, Kansas, South Dakota, Nebraska, Oklahoma State etc your classmates will include lots of that state’s smartest students, which is quite different from UMass & SUNY, much less CNU, VCU etc. But remember, just because a lot of the best students in Kansas head to the U of Kansas, it doesn’t mean most of the students at the U of Kansas are top students. There is a mixture of students at such colleges, but they DO include a lot of valedictorians & other top students. |
As a former "top" student from Massachusetts, I can confirm that this is true regarding UMass. However, I can also report that my three high school friends who went to UMass all live happy, productive lives and make more money than I, with my degree from a fancy college, do. |
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University of Westbury on Long Island for many years had a 100 percent acceptance policy. Did not even need a HS degree.
They took the kids who really screwed up in HS, teen moms etc, low paid immigrants. They had many drop out but graduated many to go on to great lives |
Depends on the major. |
| My bff's son, who is in a position similar to your DC's, is likely headed to Mary Washington. I suppose for the DMV, that is a "regional university," but it has a very high admissions rate so I thought of it when reading your post. |
+1 I attended an open-admissions, urban, arts-focused college in the midwest and graduated (late) with a liberal arts degree because I couldn't get it together enough to finish the requirements for my major. On a scale of 1 to 10, with 10 being the utmost academic rigor, my school was about a 2. Ended up at a first tier law school, then ended up getting one of the most coveted jobs out of law school. People will find their path, no matter the undergrad school. |
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Michigan State accepts 88% of its students, yet it's a fantastic school in many majors. (Supply Chain Management being the #1 in the country, which is what my DS did--LOADS of job offers for their grads).
https://ir.msu.edu/rankings It's really not always about the admit rate for the quality of the school. |
Admit rate has zero to do with quality of the school actually. |
We toured there. My kid didn't think she'd fit in with all the emo kids and thought everyone looked angry. |