Anonymous wrote:A quick overview:
Towson and Salisbury were originally teacher's colleges. Frostburg was, too. These were opened based on geography to serve their respective local students.
Bowie State, University of Maryland Eastern Shore, and Coppin University are historically-black colleges.
UMCP was the first Maryland campus, and was an agricultural college to begin with.
UMBC opened up post- WWII because of the huge boom of GI Bill vets in the Baltimore area.
University of Maryland at Baltimore are the professional schools. Med school, dentistry, physical therapy, nursing, etc.
University of Maryland University College is on the UMCP campus, but historically has been a night school for working adults. University of Baltimore was the same thing. Originally just for juniors and seniors, and grad students. Most classes were at night. Now it's a four year school.
St. Mary's is a public college, too, but is not part of the University System of Maryland.
Unofficially, Frostburg and Salisbury have party school reputations. They aren't near much, and perhaps that's why. UMCP has a great reputation for its Engineering program. UMBC is STEM-heavy, but not as great a reputation as UMCP. But it's a nice school. University of Baltimore has great contacts with the local business and legal community in Baltimore.
Hope that helps a bit.
Anonymous wrote:A quick overview:
Towson and Salisbury were originally teacher's colleges. Frostburg was, too. These were opened based on geography to serve their respective local students.
Bowie State, University of Maryland Eastern Shore, and Coppin University are historically-black colleges.
UMCP was the first Maryland campus, and was an agricultural college to begin with.
UMBC opened up post- WWII because of the huge boom of GI Bill vets in the Baltimore area.
University of Maryland at Baltimore are the professional schools. Med school, dentistry, physical therapy, nursing, etc.
University of Maryland University College is on the UMCP campus, but historically has been a night school for working adults. University of Baltimore was the same thing. Originally just for juniors and seniors, and grad students. Most classes were at night. Now it's a four year school.
St. Mary's is a public college, too, but is not part of the University System of Maryland.
Unofficially, Frostburg and Salisbury have party school reputations. They aren't near much, and perhaps that's why. UMCP has a great reputation for its Engineering program. UMBC is STEM-heavy, but not as great a reputation as UMCP. But it's a nice school. University of Baltimore has great contacts with the local business and legal community in Baltimore.
Hope that helps a bit.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I'm a transplant from out of state trying to get a handle on the public colleges in Maryland. My understanding is that UM College Park is the flagship school with the best reputation. Is this correct? How do the other schools compare? What factors should we be aware of?
Thanks
St Mary's and USNA are the premier publics. UMD is essentially a for profit school with open enrollment.
I don't even know where to start with this post.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I'm a transplant from out of state trying to get a handle on the public colleges in Maryland. My understanding is that UM College Park is the flagship school with the best reputation. Is this correct? How do the other schools compare? What factors should we be aware of?
Thanks
St Mary's and USNA are the premier publics. UMD is essentially a for profit school with open enrollment.
Anonymous wrote:I'm a transplant from out of state trying to get a handle on the public colleges in Maryland. My understanding is that UM College Park is the flagship school with the best reputation. Is this correct? How do the other schools compare? What factors should we be aware of?
Thanks
Anonymous wrote:I'm a transplant from out of state trying to get a handle on the public colleges in Maryland. My understanding is that UM College Park is the flagship school with the best reputation. Is this correct? How do the other schools compare? What factors should we be aware of?
Thanks
Anonymous wrote:UMCP is the only state school in MD that anyone has heard of outside of the state. It's your basic big state university, similar to Connecticut, Delaware and Rutgers.