Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It's been a few years for me, but the Mary Washington students were always known for being down to earth and friendly. It's on the smaller side, and has more engaged professors than the larger universities, where most classes are taught by TA's.
It's not a party school, but there is plenty to do - kids hang out and have fun like anywhere else, and the campus has plenty of clubs and activities, but you won't find an abundance of wild keggers every weekend like you would at some other schools in VA. This is a good thing for some kids, and "boring" to others.
NP. I’m another alum from when it was MWC. I absolutely loved my four years there; however, I do think the school has changed quite a bit since I attended (late 80s/90).
It was very much a school where parties were in abundance on the weekends, including “wild keggers” and the usual dorm parties found on most college campuses. The students were smart, mainstream kids. I think the demographics have changed quite a bit since then as the school seems to be quite left-leaning now. Not saying that’s good or bad, just an observation.
Most kids did not go home on the weekends when I was there, though for many of us, it was nice to have that option. Several of my friends were OOS, so definitely weren’t heading home often. Fredericksburg is a cute, historic little town with some nice restaurants and shops, but most action takes place on campus.
I loved the school because there was plenty of socializing/parties without any Greek scene and I received an excellent education to boot. It’s a hidden gem for the right student.
Anonymous wrote:It ranked #9 in Top Public Liberal Arts Schools-
https://www.usnews.com/best-colleges/rankings/national-liberal-arts-colleges/top-public
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Senior DD is looking at Mary Washington for an unusual major that’s very strong at UMW. Neither DD or our family in general are rankings snobs, so I’m not worried about the fact that she has the stats for higher-ranked schools. She’s much more concerned about the strength and opportunities within her major.
Can anyone tell me about the student body at UMW? Could a nerdy out-of-state kid find her people? How’s the school in general?
Very dear friend's son went there after getting waitlisted at UVA and VT and William and Mary, as an "average" gpa student at a governor's school who had SAT above 1400 (around avg at this gov school). He was bored out of his mind, said MW was ridiculously easy, similar to his 10th grade gov school year, before he did all the APs. He found the peers nice but not smart at all and not academically inclined. The plan the whole time was get the 4.0 for the first year and transfer. He got into all three as a transfer and graduated UVA 2 yrs ago. UVA was not super hard for him but was double the work of MW.
Anonymous wrote:Senior DD is looking at Mary Washington for an unusual major that’s very strong at UMW. Neither DD or our family in general are rankings snobs, so I’m not worried about the fact that she has the stats for higher-ranked schools. She’s much more concerned about the strength and opportunities within her major.
Can anyone tell me about the student body at UMW? Could a nerdy out-of-state kid find her people? How’s the school in general?
Anonymous wrote:It's been a few years for me, but the Mary Washington students were always known for being down to earth and friendly. It's on the smaller side, and has more engaged professors than the larger universities, where most classes are taught by TA's.
It's not a party school, but there is plenty to do - kids hang out and have fun like anywhere else, and the campus has plenty of clubs and activities, but you won't find an abundance of wild keggers every weekend like you would at some other schools in VA. This is a good thing for some kids, and "boring" to others.
Anonymous wrote:My only concern about being an OOS kid there is the number of kids who tend to go home on the weekends. It's by no means everyone, but the campus definitely feels emptier on the weekends than some other schools would.