Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:To save $25k (a year, presumably). If you don't have money, you make all sorts of trade offs.
But what can you do with a non-specific engineering degree?
The person said -oh they'll do a masters program that is specific and I argued that Vtech like most engineering schools has a 5 year Masters which arguably saves more than 25K
How is this any of your business, OP? Maybe their child didn’t get into VA Tech and they don’t want to tell you because they know you’re judgmental. Maybe their child liked the vibe at JMU better. Maybe they have financial considerations. Maybe they’re saying this to mess with you.
They asked my advice because they got into both but pushed back on my advice to go to Vtech really hard on the money part. I didn't understand why they saw the two as equal.
JMU and VA Tech decisions are out already? I didn't know they were rolling.
Anonymous wrote:Maybe they like the environment at JMU better. We had to keep my child relatively close by due to medical issues, and he chose VCU over Mason, which is objectively a better engineering program.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:To save $25k (a year, presumably). If you don't have money, you make all sorts of trade offs.
But what can you do with a non-specific engineering degree?
The person said -oh they'll do a masters program that is specific and I argued that Vtech like most engineering schools has a 5 year Masters which arguably saves more than 25K
How is this any of your business, OP? Maybe their child didn’t get into VA Tech and they don’t want to tell you because they know you’re judgmental. Maybe their child liked the vibe at JMU better. Maybe they have financial considerations. Maybe they’re saying this to mess with you.
They asked my advice because they got into both but pushed back on my advice to go to Vtech really hard on the money part. I didn't understand why they saw the two as equal.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:To save $25k (a year, presumably). If you don't have money, you make all sorts of trade offs.
But what can you do with a non-specific engineering degree?
The person said -oh they'll do a masters program that is specific and I argued that Vtech like most engineering schools has a 5 year Masters which arguably saves more than 25K
How is this any of your business, OP? Maybe their child didn’t get into VA Tech and they don’t want to tell you because they know you’re judgmental. Maybe their child liked the vibe at JMU better. Maybe they have financial considerations. Maybe they’re saying this to mess with you.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:To save $25k (a year, presumably). If you don't have money, you make all sorts of trade offs.
But what can you do with a non-specific engineering degree?
The person said -oh they'll do a masters program that is specific and I argued that Vtech like most engineering schools has a 5 year Masters which arguably saves more than 25K
Anonymous wrote:Ok, help me reason through this. Someone is considering sending their kid to JMU to save 25K. But JMU only has a general engineering degree. Why would someone choose that path?
Anonymous wrote:Ok, help me reason through this. Someone is considering sending their kid to JMU to save 25K. But JMU only has a general engineering degree. Why would someone choose that path?
Anonymous wrote:To save $25k (a year, presumably). If you don't have money, you make all sorts of trade offs.
Anonymous wrote:Are you sure it’s not GMU? GMU has a pretty decent engineering school. Cheaper than VTech and better than JMU.