Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
If you need to go instate, but can't make UVA or VT, then do it.
It's harder to get into W&M then VT.
not for CS.
True. My friend's kid got into WM for CS, but was waitlisted at VT and rejected at UVA.
4.5gpa female, varsity bball, went to a "diverse" NOVA public school.
Damn my daughter doesn't stand a chance at VT for CS. 4.3 GPA, no scores, Varsity sports, and diverse NOVA public.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
If you need to go instate, but can't make UVA or VT, then do it.
It's harder to get into W&M then VT.
not for CS.
True. My friend's kid got into WM for CS, but was waitlisted at VT and rejected at UVA.
4.5gpa female, varsity bball, went to a "diverse" NOVA public school.
Damn my daughter doesn't stand a chance at VT for CS. 4.3 GPA, no scores, Varsity sports, and diverse NOVA public.
Doesn’t stand a chance at WM unless scores come in at 1500/34+ or she sees a big GPA jump this year or she demonstrates interest like crazy and applies ED. And even then, it’s time to pray.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
If you need to go instate, but can't make UVA or VT, then do it.
It's harder to get into W&M then VT.
not for CS.
True. My friend's kid got into WM for CS, but was waitlisted at VT and rejected at UVA.
4.5gpa female, varsity bball, went to a "diverse" NOVA public school.
Damn my daughter doesn't stand a chance at VT for CS. 4.3 GPA, no scores, Varsity sports, and diverse NOVA public.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
If you need to go instate, but can't make UVA or VT, then do it.
It's harder to get into W&M then VT.
not for CS.
True. My friend's kid got into WM for CS, but was waitlisted at VT and rejected at UVA.
4.5gpa female, varsity bball, went to a "diverse" NOVA public school.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:PP - I think it is honestly a very good program because it is not part of an engineering school and so students also have to take part in the liberal arts curriculum. I also believe it is now ranked higher than Mason's CS program
It is not higher than Mason CS.
On USNWR it is. And they are investing a lot into it.
No it isn't. I just looked.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:PP - I think it is honestly a very good program because it is not part of an engineering school and so students also have to take part in the liberal arts curriculum. I also believe it is now ranked higher than Mason's CS program
It is not higher than Mason CS.
On USNWR it is. And they are investing a lot into it.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
If you need to go instate, but can't make UVA or VT, then do it.
It's harder to get into W&M then VT.
not for CS.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:PP - I think it is honestly a very good program because it is not part of an engineering school and so students also have to take part in the liberal arts curriculum. I also believe it is now ranked higher than Mason's CS program
Lots of schools have CS in and out of engineering. And even kids at engineering schools have liberal arts core requirements.
Yes, but often times you can only get a BS through engineering. A BA is CS is less valuable for the average person. And yes again about the core requirements, but there are often also a lot of (unneeded) engineering core reqs as well thrown in - UVA engineering's program for example requires multivar, chemistry, intro engineering, intro physics. How is this useful for a software dev??
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
If you need to go instate, but can't make UVA or VT, then do it.
It's harder to get into W&M then VT.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:PP - I think it is honestly a very good program because it is not part of an engineering school and so students also have to take part in the liberal arts curriculum. I also believe it is now ranked higher than Mason's CS program
What a stupid comment.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:PP - I think it is honestly a very good program because it is not part of an engineering school and so students also have to take part in the liberal arts curriculum. I also believe it is now ranked higher than Mason's CS program
What a stupid comment.
Not the poster you replied to, but I believe they were going by this: https://premium.usnews.com/best-colleges/va?schoolType=computer-science&_sort=rank&_sortDirection=asc
27. VT
33. UVA
82. W&M
100. GMU
167. VCU
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:PP - I think it is honestly a very good program because it is not part of an engineering school and so students also have to take part in the liberal arts curriculum. I also believe it is now ranked higher than Mason's CS program
What a stupid comment.
Anonymous wrote:PP - I think it is honestly a very good program because it is not part of an engineering school and so students also have to take part in the liberal arts curriculum. I also believe it is now ranked higher than Mason's CS program