Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:A 4.0 GPA has become meaningless because of the obscene grade inflation, test retaking, and ridiculous bumps at public high schools. I laugh when someone balks at their 4.4 gpa child who scored 1400 on the SAT getting rejected at UVA or W&M. If you have a legitimate 4.0+ GPA, you'd be scoring above 1500.
My daughter OOS with a 4.75 and 13 APs considers UVA and UNC at Chapel Hill long shots based on they reserve so many seats for instate. If anything they are dumbing down their school by giving Legacy, Athletic and Instate preferences. If both UVA and UNC made it soley based on academics the school ratings would be at IVY league ratings overnight
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Perhaps raise tuition for the three flagship to double for in state students vs. the lessor schools.
Really? You want to reduce demand by pricing students out of the market? For a state school?
A few states price their flagship higher than the second tier schools and community colleges. For folks on financial aid it is meaningless. But keeps sharp elbowed rich folks looking at OOS options or paying fair share.
Why is University of Virginia and UNC at Chapel Hill so heavily subsidized for instate millionaires?
Anonymous wrote:DC applied to all three of these schools last cycle and will be trying again. These three schools are getting more competitive and out of reach for everyday people. I think each of them should be split up into multiple different schools that each have less competitive admissions or they should each double in size. Not just a 10% increase or 2% increase every year or whatever thing like that. They need to start construction NOW to build at least 2x the housing, classrooms, etc. to accommodate double the number of students and all new students should be required to come from Virginia. These admissions practices have gone way too far. As soon as admission rates hit below 50% for in-state applicants there should be mandatory student body expansions
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:That makes no sense. There are a lot of great VA in-state options. Why not attend one of those?
There is too much hierarchy. Alternatively, they could combine all of the universities (UVa, VTech, William and Mary, Gmu, Jmu, Cnu, Longwood) into one university and have a lottery for all who are accepted to decide who goes to which campus.
Maybe make it more like NC. UVA separate but then Virginia U - GMU campus, VAU - Longwood campus etc.
It doesn't matter what you call them, people will go to where the most prestige is. Look at MD and how it doesn't work well. VA people should be happy to have so much choice.
Anonymous wrote:Perhaps raise tuition for the three flagship to double for in state students vs. the lessor schools.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:DC applied to all three of these schools last cycle and will be trying again. These three schools are getting more competitive and out of reach for everyday people. I think each of them should be split up into multiple different schools that each have less competitive admissions or they should each double in size. Not just a 10% increase or 2% increase every year or whatever thing like that. They need to start construction NOW to build at least 2x the housing, classrooms, etc. to accommodate double the number of students and all new students should be required to come from Virginia. These admissions practices have gone way too far. As soon as admission rates hit below 50% for in-state applicants there should be mandatory student body expansions
Double in size?. Geez VA Tech already has 50K students.
Anonymous wrote:A 4.0 GPA has become meaningless because of the obscene grade inflation, test retaking, and ridiculous bumps at public high schools. I laugh when someone balks at their 4.4 gpa child who scored 1400 on the SAT getting rejected at UVA or W&M. If you have a legitimate 4.0+ GPA, you'd be scoring above 1500.
Anonymous wrote:A 4.0 GPA has become meaningless because of the obscene grade inflation, test retaking, and ridiculous bumps at public high schools. I laugh when someone balks at their 4.4 gpa child who scored 1400 on the SAT getting rejected at UVA or W&M. If you have a legitimate 4.0+ GPA, you'd be scoring above 1500.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:That makes no sense. There are a lot of great VA in-state options. Why not attend one of those?
There is too much hierarchy. Alternatively, they could combine all of the universities (UVa, VTech, William and Mary, Gmu, Jmu, Cnu, Longwood) into one university and have a lottery for all who are accepted to decide who goes to which campus.
Maybe make it more like NC. UVA separate but then Virginia U - GMU campus, VAU - Longwood campus etc.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Perhaps raise tuition for the three flagship to double for in state students vs. the lessor schools.
Really? You want to reduce demand by pricing students out of the market? For a state school?
Anonymous wrote:DC applied to all three of these schools last cycle and will be trying again. These three schools are getting more competitive and out of reach for everyday people. I think each of them should be split up into multiple different schools that each have less competitive admissions or they should each double in size. Not just a 10% increase or 2% increase every year or whatever thing like that. They need to start construction NOW to build at least 2x the housing, classrooms, etc. to accommodate double the number of students and all new students should be required to come from Virginia. These admissions practices have gone way too far. As soon as admission rates hit below 50% for in-state applicants there should be mandatory student body expansions
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Virginia has a very good tier of schools like GMU, JMU, VCU under those three schools. They’re all very good.
You don’t seem to understand OP. They seem to think they are entitled to a certain level of prestige.