Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:TJ parent here:
DC has mediocre grades (4.1W), high SAT: 1500+
Difficult to get into UVA, VT, UMD.
So applying to safeties like UMN, Iowa State, Penn State, U Pitt
DC is not stressing, as he did not want to go in state any ways
UMN and Iowa are very reasonable and quite well ranked for STEM
At TJ does a 4.1 weighted mean mostly B+ and As in AP classes and that is not enough for UMD and others?
Anonymous wrote:TJ parent here:
DC has mediocre grades (4.1W), high SAT: 1500+
Difficult to get into UVA, VT, UMD.
So applying to safeties like UMN, Iowa State, Penn State, U Pitt
DC is not stressing, as he did not want to go in state any ways
UMN and Iowa are very reasonable and quite well ranked for STEM
Anonymous wrote:No offense but I am assuming based on this questions, your kid (like 95% of TJ kids) isn't deciding between MIT and Harvard.
Anecdotally, William & Mary loves TJ students ED, none of the other state schools seem to have quire a dramatic preference.
Don't sleep on U Pitt and University of Illinois.
There are a bunch of state schools where OOS costs can be lower than UVA in state costs.
The honors program at a lot of flagship schools can have a very pronounced "big fish in little pond" effect. You get more attention from the professors, employers and financial aid.
The VT honors engineering program may not be your dream destination but it is a very good program.
These are just some things I have heard.
U Alabama. If your kid is NMF or NMSF you can get a lot of guaranteed full tuition or full ride, a list should be easy to find onlineAnonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:No offense but I am assuming based on this questions, your kid (like 95% of TJ kids) isn't deciding between MIT and Harvard.
Anecdotally, William & Mary loves TJ students ED, none of the other state schools seem to have quire a dramatic preference.
Don't sleep on U Pitt and University of Illinois.
There are a bunch of state schools where OOS costs can be lower than UVA in state costs.
The honors program at a lot of flagship schools can have a very pronounced "big fish in little pond" effect. You get more attention from the professors, employers and financial aid.
The VT honors engineering program may not be your dream destination but it is a very good program.
These are just some things I have heard.
"There are a bunch of state schools where OOS costs can be lower than UVA in state costs." Which ones are these
U Alabama. If your kid is NMF or NMSF you can get a lot of guaranteed full tuition or full ride, a list should be easy to find onlineAnonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:No offense but I am assuming based on this questions, your kid (like 95% of TJ kids) isn't deciding between MIT and Harvard.
Anecdotally, William & Mary loves TJ students ED, none of the other state schools seem to have quire a dramatic preference.
Don't sleep on U Pitt and University of Illinois.
There are a bunch of state schools where OOS costs can be lower than UVA in state costs.
The honors program at a lot of flagship schools can have a very pronounced "big fish in little pond" effect. You get more attention from the professors, employers and financial aid.
The VT honors engineering program may not be your dream destination but it is a very good program.
These are just some things I have heard.
"There are a bunch of state schools where OOS costs can be lower than UVA in state costs." Which ones are these
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:No offense but I am assuming based on this questions, your kid (like 95% of TJ kids) isn't deciding between MIT and Harvard.
Anecdotally, William & Mary loves TJ students ED, none of the other state schools seem to have quire a dramatic preference.
Don't sleep on U Pitt and University of Illinois.
There are a bunch of state schools where OOS costs can be lower than UVA in state costs.
The honors program at a lot of flagship schools can have a very pronounced "big fish in little pond" effect. You get more attention from the professors, employers and financial aid.
The VT honors engineering program may not be your dream destination but it is a very good program.
These are just some things I have heard.
"There are a bunch of state schools where OOS costs can be lower than UVA in state costs." Which ones are these
Anonymous wrote:No offense but I am assuming based on this questions, your kid (like 95% of TJ kids) isn't deciding between MIT and Harvard.
Anecdotally, William & Mary loves TJ students ED, none of the other state schools seem to have quire a dramatic preference.
Don't sleep on U Pitt and University of Illinois.
There are a bunch of state schools where OOS costs can be lower than UVA in state costs.
The honors program at a lot of flagship schools can have a very pronounced "big fish in little pond" effect. You get more attention from the professors, employers and financial aid.
The VT honors engineering program may not be your dream destination but it is a very good program.
These are just some things I have heard.