It's not that bad if you time it right. Driving to VaTech is worse. |
| Parents that worry about their college age students driving on 81 should worry about their children driving, period. It’s not a difficult road to drive, it just has traffic backups a lot. |
Well, VT is two hours further but it's not any worse - just longer. And quite beautiful. DP |
In-state is 66%. https://research.schev.edu/iProfile//232423/James-Madison-University |
19%. And the average range is 1210-1370. https://www.jmu.edu/admissions/fastfacts.shtml |
Very true. My neighbor's daughter goes there and is quite "alternative," very involved in theater and has a similar friend group. JMU has all kinds of people. |
Yes, we can tell. No one ever looked at JMU like that, sorry. |
Yes, I list the acceptance rate of instate (66%) and out of state (78%) averaged. Still not as competitive as I expected. |
16% https://www.jmu.edu/pair/ir/common-data-set/index.shtml |
| It’s very affordable instate and still pretty affordable out of state. |
JMU is a good school in a beautiful environment. With a small endowment, it is dependent on keeping the place completely full for tuition revenue. My parents school Illinois State is similar in that each school really has to reload each year for 20,000 students. Both benefit from the difficulties in obtaining admission from their respective flagships. |
But the Greek system runs the social life there, it was obvious to the naked eye. The program kid wanted is stronger at other state schools. Campus was too spread out, buses required. Kid was driving their own decision and ended up at a school that outranks JMU in chosen fields (major and minor) and has stronger national name recognition. If kid moves to the West Coast, people will still know the name. JMU they would have to google. |
Glad you and your kid are happy with where he/she landed, but that first sentence is just not accurate. |
JMU is not very competitive overall but it has gotten MUCH more competitive at certain high schools in Northern Virginia, partly because it has become less of a regional school. If kids from Massachusetts are taking up more spots, it leaves fewer spots for in-state kids. And when some NOVA high schools have enormous numbers applying, many of these students will get shut out. Our high school counselor told my kid that it was a "reach" at our school for anyone under 4.0W, which I knew was an exaggeration, but still, I do know decent students who got turned down. |
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It’s a university that prioritizes teaching undergraduates, which is really something special. Most of the flagships you hear about here get their ratings because of research and graduate programs. This doesn’t make them bad schools or anything, they just don’t have the same focus on undergrad teaching.
JMU is also insanely affordable for in-state. Not sure about the OOS cost. |