Anonymous wrote:Doesn’t it still have a large percentage of commuter students? Also not much in the way of campus life.
not since 1999Anonymous wrote:Doesn’t it still have a large percentage of commuter students? Also not much in the way of campus life.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:GMU has engineering? I knew they had a CS program, but not engineering.
And now you know!
Anonymous wrote:GMU has engineering? I knew they had a CS program, but not engineering.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I never understand the idea about a school being too close to home. A student never has to go home if they don't want to. I went away to college in FL but my whole dad's side lived in the town about 5 mins away. I'm talking grandma, uncles, aunts, cousins. Family I love and am close to. I NEVER saw them unless I wanted to (random Sunday meals were nice). I had a full college experience.
The thing for George Mason is the issue for them is not just close to home it is the image and largely reality of being a suburban commuter school. If it was University of Florida then I don't think it would face the same level of issue.
Anonymous wrote:I never understand the idea about a school being too close to home. A student never has to go home if they don't want to. I went away to college in FL but my whole dad's side lived in the town about 5 mins away. I'm talking grandma, uncles, aunts, cousins. Family I love and am close to. I NEVER saw them unless I wanted to (random Sunday meals were nice). I had a full college experience.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:VT is kind of bottom line that you can talk to your friedns that your kid is going to VT Engineering
Practically GMU CS is very fine.
Forgive me, but I don't understand what this means?
It’s braggy.
My son got into CS at Mason and some people almost looked at me with pity when I shared where he was going. It’s an exceptional program and he’ll have no problem landing internships and work. And he’s having a great time there as well.
Anonymous wrote:Once you pass your state licensing exam for engineering the college that you graduated from really does not matter so much.
Anonymous wrote:Also, how many public polytechnic universities do they expect a state to have?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:In another thread, someone kept saying VT is the only VA polytechnic institute in the state. Why do people act like GMU does not exist?
VT offers polytech in areas of agriculture, animal husbandry, forestry, health and nutrition, architecture and a lot of other tech areas that GMU does not. But GMU does excel in Engineering, Computer Science, Cybersecurity and Game Design. My DC went there and has been employed since before graduation by Microsoft.