Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If they want engineering, Purdue out of state is about the same as instate UVA.
Yes. Purdue is very affordable, even out of state. Purdue’s engineering program is the 9th best in the country. UVA is 37th. Purdue would be the easy choice.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If your child wants to pursue engineering, UVA is not a great choice. I can think of tons of schools - GA Tech, UIUC, Michigan, Purdue, UT, Wisconsin, northwestern. UVA is not even a top 25 program. [/quote]
You are wrong. And my UVA aerospace engineering student is now doing grad work at Princeton. https://engineering.virginia.edu/news/2021/02/uva-engineering-recognized-among-top-schools-multiple-rankings
What’s wrong? UVA is NOT a top 25 program.
Why does it matter if UVA is a top program? What would be the practical consequences of that?
If you think that ranking doesn’t matter, then why doesn’t matter if one goes to UVA or JMU? Higher ranked school have more developed and recognized programs. Greater opportunities for research, internships, and post grad jobs.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If your child wants to pursue engineering, UVA is not a great choice. I can think of tons of schools - GA Tech, UIUC, Michigan, Purdue, UT, Wisconsin, northwestern. UVA is not even a top 25 program. [/quote]
You are wrong. And my UVA aerospace engineering student is now doing grad work at Princeton. https://engineering.virginia.edu/news/2021/02/uva-engineering-recognized-among-top-schools-multiple-rankings
Not quite. That ranking is for an online masters degree. OP was asking about undergrad. This the the undergraduate rankings. UVA is 42nd.
https://www.usnews.com/best-colleges/rankings/engineering-doctorate
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If your child wants to pursue engineering, UVA is not a great choice. I can think of tons of schools - GA Tech, UIUC, Michigan, Purdue, UT, Wisconsin, northwestern. UVA is not even a top 25 program. [/quote]
You are wrong. And my UVA aerospace engineering student is now doing grad work at Princeton. https://engineering.virginia.edu/news/2021/02/uva-engineering-recognized-among-top-schools-multiple-rankings
What’s wrong? UVA is NOT a top 25 program.
Why does it matter if UVA is a top program? What would be the practical consequences of that?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If your child wants to pursue engineering, UVA is not a great choice. I can think of tons of schools - GA Tech, UIUC, Michigan, Purdue, UT, Wisconsin, northwestern. UVA is not even a top 25 program. [/quote]
You are wrong. And my UVA aerospace engineering student is now doing grad work at Princeton. https://engineering.virginia.edu/news/2021/02/uva-engineering-recognized-among-top-schools-multiple-rankings
What’s wrong? UVA is NOT a top 25 program.
Anonymous wrote:If your child wants to pursue engineering, UVA is not a great choice. I can think of tons of schools - GA Tech, UIUC, Michigan, Purdue, UT, Wisconsin, northwestern. UVA is not even a top 25 program. [/quote]
You are wrong. And my UVA aerospace engineering student is now doing grad work at Princeton. https://engineering.virginia.edu/news/2021/02/uva-engineering-recognized-among-top-schools-multiple-rankings
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:A recent transfer student to UVA told us that it is like High School 2.0. For a student that wants a different more diverse more evolved experience there are a LOT of schools that are worth it. Especially if money isn’t a factor.
And here come the predictable UVA naysayers. OP there are many here on this board who hate UVA for some reason. Ignore them.
My kid is at UVA from NOVA and never sees any of the 10 kids from his class that go to UVA. It’s far from HS 2.0 but I suppose if a kid makes it so and doesn’t branch out from who they already know, that’s on them.
To answer your question though I think it’s totally program/major dependent and if the kid hates UVA for whatever reason, don’t force them.
[b]Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:One interesting factoid is UVa. actually has the third highest in state tuition of all publics. William and Mary is the highest.
Uva in-state engineering for 2022-23 was $24,650 with slight decreases each year after;
W&M for same year was $17,434
While W&M doesn't really have engineering, if you are a CS major, you could end up paying more at UVA.
God I remember it being $2200/year when I was a freshman in CS. I guess they had to pay for all those new buildings.
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Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:One interesting factoid is UVa. actually has the third highest in state tuition of all publics. William and Mary is the highest.
Uva in-state engineering for 2022-23 was $24,650 with slight decreases each year after;
W&M for same year was $17,434
While W&M doesn't really have engineering, if you are a CS major, you could end up paying more at UVA.
God I remember it being $2200/year when I was a freshman in CS. I guess they had to pay for all those new buildings.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:One interesting factoid is UVa. actually has the third highest in state tuition of all publics. William and Mary is the highest.
Uva in-state engineering for 2022-23 was $24,650 with slight decreases each year after;
W&M for same year was $17,434
While W&M doesn't really have engineering, if you are a CS major, you could end up paying more at UVA.
Anonymous wrote:One interesting factoid is UVa. actually has the third highest in state tuition of all publics. William and Mary is the highest.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:As a UMC family we can fortunately afford to send our son to whatever college he likes the most, but from a practical standpoint if he was to get an offer from UVA what schools might be worth to pay for over the in-state discount?
Every school is worth it if it is the right fit. Sometimes money means you do not get to the place you should go. If money matters not then fit is your only concern. You do fit and forget the money. Now if fit is close for state school then there is your answer. But I would full pay anywhere over in-state if the fit was better.