No, they are like every parent everywhere. Looking for a way out of paying $95K a year for a quality four year education. Nothing more. |
+1 My oldest is at Berkeley (we're in California), and my younger two wanted to avoid the downsides of going to a big school when they saw what her experience there was like. They wanted a mid-size school with excellent academics and undergraduate teaching, full of "nice kids". They're both very happy at William and Mary. |
Are you not aware that there are a lot of UVA kids at Oxford and T14s? UVA is the top public producer of Rhodes Scholars at 56. https://news.virginia.edu/content/uvas-56th-rhodes-scholar-targets-2-oxford-degrees-medical-school. My Harvard Law kid says there are ten UVA students at Harvard Law now. |
| It's about money. Obviously. |
It’s all about the serpentine walls. |
Serpentine walls and Hokie stone and Sunken gardens. There's your answer. |
It's enough to get in state tuition but it isnt a guarantee you can attend. |
| OP, your post is legit embarrassing. Think, THEN type |
Ah, but only the chronically insecure view other non-Ivy League schools as public Ivies and little Ivies. Stop a random person at Wegmans and ask them to name a little Ivy. Let me know what they say. Ivies are very well defined. Pseudo-Ivies are not even remotely the same. |
| Excellent in state financial aid at UVA and W&M |
What differences do you see in teaching, advising, career services, etc.? |
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IIRC, William and Mary is the most expensive in-state tuition public school in the country. Between tuition, room and board, and fees (especially the business school), we pay more in-state than we paid for our other son who was an engineer at Purdue (out of state).
These are extremes, but its a surprising extreme comparison. |
And now it includes Pitts. |
As the average person to name the Ivy league schools. Most can't do that either. |
Pretty sure Michigan and Vermont are way more expensive than W&M for instate. |