True, but irrelevant really. The overall rating takes into account all kinds of thIngs having nothing to do with the quality of undergraduate teaching - which, presumably, is why your kid is going there. The graduate programs like business and law are prestigious and that matters of you are in those programs. |
Undergraduate teaching ranking is a product of a peer survey to college presidents, provosts and admissions deans. Does anyone really believe these people have a clue about what’s going on in classrooms at other colleges? Get serious. Of all the rankings I rank this one as dead last. |
Yes of course. We're talking prestige and reputation in this thread. |
OP. No, it is not. |
Well, you could say the same for the peer rankings themselves. . . |
I moved here a few years ago from NC. From that perspective, UVA is a perfectly respectable college, but kids aren’t lining up to apply unless their parents is an alum. UNC will get you basically the same thing for instate tuition, but is much, much easier to get into, because it caps OOS admission at less than 20%. UVA is considered on par with Wake Forest, which has been very close to it (within 1-2 spots) in US News rankings for a while. Similar vibe— southern, somewhat conservative, strong Greek scene, does well by pre-professionals and WASPs. But most kids making this choice figure if they aren’t going to get instate tuition from UVA, they may as well go to UNC if they want a big state U or Wake Forest if they want a similar social scene but smaller classes and more resources.
So OOS, in your next door neighbor state (and not CA), the reputation is that it is a good school. It attracts smart, accomplished kids, and many of them will go on to do impressive things. But not worth the tuition OOS, given the NC options. It is very definitely not thought of as an ivy equivalent school. In fact, WM is the VA school that high achieving OOS kids in NC apply to, not UVA. Probably because WM gives them something UNC can’t. Until I. Iced here it would never have dawned on me that UVA would be considered more prestigious than WM. Now, I’m a lawyer, and the UVA law school has a great reputation. Getting in as an OOS student is considered to be very impressive, and a UVA law degree is prestigious. Not ivy level It won’t get you a SCOTUS clerkship. But, one step down, and it will get you looked at seriously by most major firms. Don’t know enough about the other grad programs enough to comment, except to say the OOS UVA is considered to be less prestigious than VT in engineering. And i have no skin in this game yet. I am not an alum of these school, and don’t have a kid old enough to be seriously considering one. That’s just the general thoughts from a neighboring state. BTW— Pomona, CM, Mudd— amazing schools. I would love to send a kid there someday. Sadly, will probably be priced out, even if they could get in. |
UVA is only regionally known. So no, not prestigious. |
+1 that's really all that needs to be said. End of thread. |
The reputation of the undergraduate school is apparently good enough to have produced 50+ Rhodes scholars over the years, more than all but seven schools in the entire country. |
Good, but not "prestigious". |
UVa law school is ranked 9th in the country and the business school is 13th in recent us news rankings but since most people don’t have MBAs or JDs, UVa is not considered ‘prestigious.’ It’s definitely more of a regional school. |
Again, how to you explain the massive numbers of OOS applications then? |
Well, smarty pants, here’s the thing: UVA law grads do in fact get Supreme Court clerkships. I know several of them personally. Beyond that, of course it makes little sense for a North Carolina resident to pay out of state tuition to go to UVA when they could go to UNC. UNC is one of the best public universities in the country, just behind UVA. And UVA is definitely more highly regarded than wake forest. |
Yeah, UVA is one of just a few law schools to have produced more than 100 scotus clerks since 1960. FWIW, Michigan isn’t far behind, at 85. https://www.bcgsearch.com/article/900047770/Law-Schools-That-Send-the-Most-Attorneys-to-United-States-Supreme-Court-Clerkships/ |
Oh and about that ivy level claim: Penn is way behind, at 42, and Cornell only has 8. |