Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Check out the College admission advice for awesomely average kids board on Facebook. One of the rules is no GPAs over 3.5. The kids are getting into great places all over the country.
How do moderators know what your kid's GPA is if you don't share it?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Washington and Jefferson College
Chatham University
Juniata
Susquehana
Longwood
Allegheny
I'd be careful with Washington and Jefferson-they look like their on their way out with enrollment issues and a small endowment. Same with Juniata, Chatham (whose really in crisis), and Susquehana. The private liberal arts colleges are really taking a tumble in debts
That's true. I know some recent grads and current students - I don't know if the schools are in immediate danger (during the student's enrollment), although being an alum of a college that will exist in the longterm is certainly more appealing.
Anonymous wrote:Also consider that things may ease up a bit in the next two years. Population of hs graduates drops after 2025.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You might want to look at Furman, Center, and U of Tampa
Be careful with U of Tampa. The graduation and freshman retention rates are terrible. Despite its low acceptance rate, it's not selective based on academic talent but on who can afford to pay full freight. The endowment is puny, and housing is a yearly issue.
+1 on the housing issue at U of Tampa. Our friends' DC almost went there but backed out because of the housing mess.
What about FIU instead? Great for hospitality + an interesting and diverse student body.
Or Ithaca? Long winter with grey weather, but beautiful setting if DC can handle the cold.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You might want to look at Furman, Center, and U of Tampa
Be careful with U of Tampa. The graduation and freshman retention rates are terrible. Despite its low acceptance rate, it's not selective based on academic talent but on who can afford to pay full freight. The endowment is puny, and housing is a yearly issue.
Anonymous wrote:This is actually a cool position to be in because you can skip all the typical dc nonsense regarding school prestige. You have a lot of choices. Butler and Marquette are good options. Any of the non-flagship public universities will be good options - but factor in whether you like people from those areas - they tend to have a high concentration of kids from that state and the alumni network and job placement stuff will be centered around that state.
Anonymous wrote:This is actually a cool position to be in because you can skip all the typical dc nonsense regarding school prestige. You have a lot of choices. Butler and Marquette are good options. Any of the non-flagship public universities will be good options - but factor in whether you like people from those areas - they tend to have a high concentration of kids from that state and the alumni network and job placement stuff will be centered around that state.
Anonymous wrote:If she goes out of state, then you will be spending at least
$60k/year on her schooling, OP.