The Greek System does not run the social life there, what an odd takeaway. The school is only 20% Greek. When I went there, none of my friends were in sororities and it was around 20% Greek then too. |
| My dd's counselor (large FCPS HS) also told her that for girls from their school, its a target at 4.0 weighted. Not sure why its more popular with girls than boys. |
Literally I don't know anyone who chose JMU over UMD, lol. You might know a few but not at our MCPS school. And the kids who go to UMD love it. People who end up at JMU were rejected from VT. |
Getting accepted at other schools is a lot tougher now hence local students only talk about attainable goal, if something better comes along great, they'll go there. |
College in general is more popular with girls than boys. My DD has about a 4.0 weighted, not terribly rigorous, NOVA HS and was admitted to JMU. I thought she'd be waitlisted or rejected, so we were pretty pleased. A visit on admitted students day sealed the deal. She starts in the fall. |
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JMU has improved a lot as a school since the early 1980s, as have GMU, ODU, and some other newer VA public universities. Reputations, quality, and facilities all have improved at most or all of these places.
Bottom line is that JMU is much more popular now than in 1980 or 1990 - for good reasons. And same is true for GMU, ODU, and several other newer VA public universities. |
I think it’s the rise of the perception that in-state options are inferior. It does not make that much sense to pay for JMO OOS vs say UMBC. |
Agree and what the OP was actually asking about instead of pointless comparisons. |
As costs skyrocket and admissions rates drop, the in-state options are perceived as less inferior then they were in the past. |
Everything you listed is subjective except the first sentence. The Greek system doesn’t “run the social life there.” That’s ridiculously untrue, and I’ve actually HAD two non-Greek kids there - you have not. Look, it’s obvious you have some kind of chip on your shoulder but to claim that a 20% greek population somehow “runs” the social scene is just laughable. My kids had a very active social life there, along with the 80% of other kids not involved in Greek life. |
Exactly! DP |
The CEO of Northrup Grumman is a JMU grad. |
| Many senior leaders (SVPs, VPs) at my DC area Fortune 500. (Not Northup) |
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I think JMU is one of those schools that have benefitted from the increase in the cost of private schools. Donut hole families, especially those toward the bottom and with multiple kids, cannot swing a private school these days. These families now look at in-state publics and OOS publics that offer good merit.
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JMU is popular everywhere. It has strong academics built by the reputation, especially the business school, because of the success of its graduates. It offers both a big school benefits (Go Dukes) with a smaller, tight knit social and learning communities.
There are many reasons why JMU is the perfect school for so many kids. |