Anonymous wrote:According to the table, over 40% of all students enrolled at CMU are foreign nationals. (This includes both graduate and undergraduate students.)
Anonymous wrote:According to the table, over 40% of all students enrolled at CMU are foreign nationals. (This includes both graduate and undergraduate students.)
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous. [/quote wrote:
Here's the demographic distribution, as reported by CMU (for 2018):
https://www.cmu.edu/ira/Enrollment/pdf/fall-2018-pdfs/university-facts-2018-student-enrollment-by-citizenship-race-sex.pdf
Very interesting figures in that table.
You aren’t kidding. If international students don’t enroll in the US in high numbers this year due to the economy, virus, or delays in the student visa process, where does it leave some of these schools that reply on high numbers of international students?
Why did they accept so many international students? My friend's TJ son with 1600 SAT, 15 APs, many ECs & volunteer hours didn't get in last year. They have high income and will definitely pay full tuition.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous. [/quote wrote:
Here's the demographic distribution, as reported by CMU (for 2018):
https://www.cmu.edu/ira/Enrollment/pdf/fall-2018-pdfs/university-facts-2018-student-enrollment-by-citizenship-race-sex.pdf
Very interesting figures in that table.
You aren’t kidding. If international students don’t enroll in the US in high numbers this year due to the economy, virus, or delays in the student visa process, where does it leave some of these schools that reply on high numbers of international students?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous. [/quote wrote:
Here's the demographic distribution, as reported by CMU (for 2018):
https://www.cmu.edu/ira/Enrollment/pdf/fall-2018-pdfs/university-facts-2018-student-enrollment-by-citizenship-race-sex.pdf
Very interesting figures in that table.
Anonymous. [/quote wrote:
Here's the demographic distribution, as reported by CMU (for 2018):
https://www.cmu.edu/ira/Enrollment/pdf/fall-2018-pdfs/university-facts-2018-student-enrollment-by-citizenship-race-sex.pdf
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Read all posts, very helpful discussion. So the argument is basically about the money, right? If money is not an issue, people will always choose CMU, am I right?
The cost savings is one factor. Another is this: do you want your kid to have a normal college experience? If so, choose UVA.
So you define a "normal" college experience as UVA's? And experiences at other colleges like CMU are abnormal?
This is my question too, several posts seem having concern about the experience in CMU. What is exactly the concern?
Not sure, but here's a guess. Is it a normal college experience if half of the student body, and half of the professorate, don't speak English as a primary language?
Is this CMU? I can underrated the professorate, why student body? Do you mean half of the students are international students?
Take a walk through the CMU campus some day. The majority seem to be international students or children of recent immigrants. Very diverse, as they say. Ironically, the least diverse group on campus seems to be the men's basketball team.
All of this may be normal, these days, for a science and engineering school. But you'll have to decide for yourself whether this makes for a "normal" college experience.
About 1/4 of undergrads are international students.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Read all posts, very helpful discussion. So the argument is basically about the money, right? If money is not an issue, people will always choose CMU, am I right?
The cost savings is one factor. Another is this: do you want your kid to have a normal college experience? If so, choose UVA.
So you define a "normal" college experience as UVA's? And experiences at other colleges like CMU are abnormal?
This is my question too, several posts seem having concern about the experience in CMU. What is exactly the concern?
Not sure, but here's a guess. Is it a normal college experience if half of the student body, and half of the professorate, don't speak English as a primary language?
Is this CMU? I can underrated the professorate, why student body? Do you mean half of the students are international students?
Take a walk through the CMU campus some day. The majority seem to be international students or children of recent immigrants. Very diverse, as they say. Ironically, the least diverse group on campus seems to be the men's basketball team.
All of this may be normal, these days, for a science and engineering school. But you'll have to decide for yourself whether this makes for a "normal" college experience.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Read all posts, very helpful discussion. So the argument is basically about the money, right? If money is not an issue, people will always choose CMU, am I right?
The cost savings is one factor. Another is this: do you want your kid to have a normal college experience? If so, choose UVA.
So you define a "normal" college experience as UVA's? And experiences at other colleges like CMU are abnormal?
This is my question too, several posts seem having concern about the experience in CMU. What is exactly the concern?
Not sure, but here's a guess. Is it a normal college experience if half of the student body, and half of the professorate, don't speak English as a primary language?
Is this CMU? I can underrated the professorate, why student body? Do you mean half of the students are international students?
Take a walk through the CMU campus some day. The majority seem to be international students or children of recent immigrants. Very diverse, as they say. Ironically, the least diverse group on campus seems to be the men's basketball team.
All of this may be normal, these days, for a science and engineering school. But you'll have to decide for yourself whether this makes for a "normal" college experience.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Read all posts, very helpful discussion. So the argument is basically about the money, right? If money is not an issue, people will always choose CMU, am I right?
The cost savings is one factor. Another is this: do you want your kid to have a normal college experience? If so, choose UVA.
So you define a "normal" college experience as UVA's? And experiences at other colleges like CMU are abnormal?
This is my question too, several posts seem having concern about the experience in CMU. What is exactly the concern?
Not sure, but here's a guess. Is it a normal college experience if half of the student body, and half of the professorate, don't speak English as a primary language?
Is this CMU? I can underrated the professorate, why student body? Do you mean half of the students are international students?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Read all posts, very helpful discussion. So the argument is basically about the money, right? If money is not an issue, people will always choose CMU, am I right?
The cost savings is one factor. Another is this: do you want your kid to have a normal college experience? If so, choose UVA.
So you define a "normal" college experience as UVA's? And experiences at other colleges like CMU are abnormal?
This is my question too, several posts seem having concern about the experience in CMU. What is exactly the concern?
Not sure, but here's a guess. Is it a normal college experience if half of the student body, and half of the professorate, don't speak English as a primary language?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Read all posts, very helpful discussion. So the argument is basically about the money, right? If money is not an issue, people will always choose CMU, am I right?
The cost savings is one factor. Another is this: do you want your kid to have a normal college experience? If so, choose UVA.
So you define a "normal" college experience as UVA's? And experiences at other colleges like CMU are abnormal?
This is my question too, several posts seem having concern about the experience in CMU. What is exactly the concern?