How intellectual is UGA?

Anonymous
*aren't
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
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Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:What if all they care about is getting the best education and highest-paying engineering job possible without going to graduate school?


Yawn. You seem miserable. UGA kids balance academic success with social success and go on to be highly successful. Guess what? The social cues they learn at UGA are just as important, if not more important. Nobody wants to hire human drones that never learned to live a little.

This is not how I approached college (or would want my kids to), but an increasingly higher percentage of parents see an undergraduate education as purely transactional rather than a formative experience.


UGA has strong students across all disciplines. They mostly tend to be very friendly, attractive and outgoing. They love the Bulldogs. If you’re looking for a boring, transactional experience, UGA probably isn’t right for you.

That was my only point. I'd pick UGA, but for lots of people GT is the better choice.


Not quite. UGA is better for every major except engineering and most kids would prefer UGA’s social experience. So really, GT is only better for engineers and nerds.


Dude...It's not only engineering. Tech is the number 9 ranked public institution overall by US. News and a Public Ivy by Forbes. UGA ain't got that smoke.


Dude…nobody cares about your silly little rankings. Plus nobody would want to go to college in Atlanta if they were honest about it.


Don’t get this comment. Atlanta is a great city for college students and a great city overall.


How is Atlanta a great city for college students? It’s the opposite of a college town infested with crime and traffic worse than DC.


Uhhh…because it’s a major city with everything a college kid might want to do. Seems like you think all large cities are bad for college students, when college kids love Boston, NYC, Philly, Atlanta, LA, etc.

Athens is a nice town…but that’s not a city.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:What if all they care about is getting the best education and highest-paying engineering job possible without going to graduate school?


Yawn. You seem miserable. UGA kids balance academic success with social success and go on to be highly successful. Guess what? The social cues they learn at UGA are just as important, if not more important. Nobody wants to hire human drones that never learned to live a little.

This is not how I approached college (or would want my kids to), but an increasingly higher percentage of parents see an undergraduate education as purely transactional rather than a formative experience.


UGA has strong students across all disciplines. They mostly tend to be very friendly, attractive and outgoing. They love the Bulldogs. If you’re looking for a boring, transactional experience, UGA probably isn’t right for you.

That was my only point. I'd pick UGA, but for lots of people GT is the better choice.


Not quite. UGA is better for every major except engineering and most kids would prefer UGA’s social experience. So really, GT is only better for engineers and nerds.


Dude...It's not only engineering. Tech is the number 9 ranked public institution overall by US. News and a Public Ivy by Forbes. UGA ain't got that smoke.


Dude…nobody cares about your silly little rankings. Plus nobody would want to go to college in Atlanta if they were honest about it.


Don’t get this comment. Atlanta is a great city for college students and a great city overall.


How is Atlanta a great city for college students? It’s the opposite of a college town infested with crime and traffic worse than DC.


lol Athens is paradise and not crime ridden? C'mon man.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:What if all they care about is getting the best education and highest-paying engineering job possible without going to graduate school?


Yawn. You seem miserable. UGA kids balance academic success with social success and go on to be highly successful. Guess what? The social cues they learn at UGA are just as important, if not more important. Nobody wants to hire human drones that never learned to live a little.

This is not how I approached college (or would want my kids to), but an increasingly higher percentage of parents see an undergraduate education as purely transactional rather than a formative experience.


UGA has strong students across all disciplines. They mostly tend to be very friendly, attractive and outgoing. They love the Bulldogs. If you’re looking for a boring, transactional experience, UGA probably isn’t right for you.

That was my only point. I'd pick UGA, but for lots of people GT is the better choice.


Not quite. UGA is better for every major except engineering and most kids would prefer UGA’s social experience. So really, GT is only better for engineers and nerds.


Dude...It's not only engineering. Tech is the number 9 ranked public institution overall by US. News and a Public Ivy by Forbes. UGA ain't got that smoke.


Dude…nobody cares about your silly little rankings. Plus nobody would want to go to college in Atlanta if they were honest about it.


Don’t get this comment. Atlanta is a great city for college students and a great city overall.


How is Atlanta a great city for college students? It’s the opposite of a college town infested with crime and traffic worse than DC.


Uhhh…because it’s a major city with everything a college kid might want to do. Seems like you think all large cities are bad for college students, when college kids love Boston, NYC, Philly, Atlanta, LA, etc.

Athens is a nice town…but that’s not a city.


Not to mention it's becoming one of the better Tech Hubs in the country.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:I've been to Athens and it was fun, but why is UGA getting fewer applications than Michigan, Penn State, Florida State, Wisconsin, and even Virginia Tech?


The acceptance rate is 33%, they don’t need more apps.


Damn. That's high. UF was in the low 20's.


So? Why would UGA want a lower acceptance rate?

Acceptance rate is a red herring. If UGA is so desirable, why are more people applying?


UGA received record apps this year.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:What if all they care about is getting the best education and highest-paying engineering job possible without going to graduate school?


Yawn. You seem miserable. UGA kids balance academic success with social success and go on to be highly successful. Guess what? The social cues they learn at UGA are just as important, if not more important. Nobody wants to hire human drones that never learned to live a little.

This is not how I approached college (or would want my kids to), but an increasingly higher percentage of parents see an undergraduate education as purely transactional rather than a formative experience.


UGA has strong students across all disciplines. They mostly tend to be very friendly, attractive and outgoing. They love the Bulldogs. If you’re looking for a boring, transactional experience, UGA probably isn’t right for you.

That was my only point. I'd pick UGA, but for lots of people GT is the better choice.


Not quite. UGA is better for every major except engineering and most kids would prefer UGA’s social experience. So really, GT is only better for engineers and nerds.


Dude...It's not only engineering. Tech is the number 9 ranked public institution overall by US. News and a Public Ivy by Forbes. UGA ain't got that smoke.


Dude…nobody cares about your silly little rankings. Plus nobody would want to go to college in Atlanta if they were honest about it.


Don’t get this comment. Atlanta is a great city for college students and a great city overall.


How is Atlanta a great city for college students? It’s the opposite of a college town infested with crime and traffic worse than DC.


Uhhh…because it’s a major city with everything a college kid might want to do. Seems like you think all large cities are bad for college students, when college kids love Boston, NYC, Philly, Atlanta, LA, etc.

Athens is a nice town…but that’s not a city.


Athens is better for COLLEGE because it’s a COLLEGE town. This isn’t hard.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:I've been to Athens and it was fun, but why is UGA getting fewer applications than Michigan, Penn State, Florida State, Wisconsin, and even Virginia Tech?


The acceptance rate is 33%, they don’t need more apps.


Damn. That's high. UF was in the low 20's.


So? Why would UGA want a lower acceptance rate?

Acceptance rate is a red herring. If UGA is so desirable, why are more people applying?


UGA received record apps this year.


But it was only 47,000. UF was like 90,000. Much smaller school Georgia Tech received 67,000
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:UGA received record apps this year.

Good for them, but why are other state flagships more popular?
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:I've been to Athens and it was fun, but why is UGA getting fewer applications than Michigan, Penn State, Florida State, Wisconsin, and even Virginia Tech?


The acceptance rate is 33%, they don’t need more apps.


Damn. That's high. UF was in the low 20's.


So? Why would UGA want a lower acceptance rate?

Acceptance rate is a red herring. If UGA is so desirable, why are more people applying?


UGA received record apps this year.


But it was only 47,000. UF was like 90,000. Much smaller school Georgia Tech received 67,000


So? UGA doesn’t need more apps. They already reject 67% of applicants.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:UGA received record apps this year.

Good for them, but why are other state flagships more popular?


Based on what metric?
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:I've been to Athens and it was fun, but why is UGA getting fewer applications than Michigan, Penn State, Florida State, Wisconsin, and even Virginia Tech?


The acceptance rate is 33%, they don’t need more apps.


Damn. That's high. UF was in the low 20's.


So? Why would UGA want a lower acceptance rate?

Acceptance rate is a red herring. If UGA is so desirable, why are more people applying?


UGA received record apps this year.


But it was only 47,000. UF was like 90,000. Much smaller school Georgia Tech received 67,000


So? UGA doesn’t need more apps. They already reject 67% of applicants.


They accepted 33%. Which is still a lot more than a school like UF which received 90,000 and accepted in low 20's. GT received 67,000 and accepted 12%. Your point is non sensical.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:UGA received record apps this year.

Good for them, but why are other state flagships more popular?

Based on what metric?

Based on number of applicants. Have you not been paying attention?
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:I've been to Athens and it was fun, but why is UGA getting fewer applications than Michigan, Penn State, Florida State, Wisconsin, and even Virginia Tech?


The acceptance rate is 33%, they don’t need more apps.


Damn. That's high. UF was in the low 20's.


So? Why would UGA want a lower acceptance rate?

Acceptance rate is a red herring. If UGA is so desirable, why are more people applying?


UGA received record apps this year.


But it was only 47,000. UF was like 90,000. Much smaller school Georgia Tech received 67,000


So? UGA doesn’t need more apps. They already reject 67% of applicants.


They accepted 33%. Which is still a lot more than a school like UF which received 90,000 and accepted in low 20's. GT received 67,000 and accepted 12%. Your point is non sensical.


But why would UGA want more apps? Just to lower an acceptance rate? Who cares lol
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:UGA received record apps this year.

Good for them, but why are other state flagships more popular?

Based on what metric?

Based on number of applicants. Have you not been paying attention?


Who said applications equate to popularity?

Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:I've been to Athens and it was fun, but why is UGA getting fewer applications than Michigan, Penn State, Florida State, Wisconsin, and even Virginia Tech?


The acceptance rate is 33%, they don’t need more apps.


Damn. That's high. UF was in the low 20's.


So? Why would UGA want a lower acceptance rate?

Acceptance rate is a red herring. If UGA is so desirable, why are more people applying?


UGA received record apps this year.


But it was only 47,000. UF was like 90,000. Much smaller school Georgia Tech received 67,000


So? UGA doesn’t need more apps. They already reject 67% of applicants.


They accepted 33%. Which is still a lot more than a school like UF which received 90,000 and accepted in low 20's. GT received 67,000 and accepted 12%. Your point is non sensical.


But why would UGA want more apps? Just to lower an acceptance rate? Who cares lol


LOL OK now UGA is only received 47,000 because they didn't want anymore and got the word out. C'mon now.
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