Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I would say Virginia has two: VT (non STEM) and JMU. I don't think MD has any. Most states don't have more than 2 except the ones significantly bigger than Virginia.
JMU should never be compared to VT.
Why? For non-STEM, JMU might be the better option for many.
Better option how? VT has much more respect in the D.C. metro area/VA than JMU. For any major.
Nope. I'm from here.
It's
Tier 1: uva and wm
Tier 2: jmu and vt
Tier 3: gmu, vcu, cnu etc
Anonymous wrote:Isn’t it a good thing that most of the state colleges aren’t super selective? No matter what kind of student you have, there are multiple schools for you in Virginia.
Maybe you equal educational quality with selectivity. Like you only want what only a few can have instead of focusing on the real opportunities in front of you? That’s an unfortunate mindset.
Totally agree. "I love JMU, I just wish I had less of a shot at acceptance there." WutAnonymous wrote:Isn’t it a good thing that most of the state colleges aren’t super selective? No matter what kind of student you have, there are multiple schools for you in Virginia.
Maybe you equal educational quality with selectivity. Like you only want what only a few can have instead of focusing on the real opportunities in front of you? That’s an unfortunate mindset.
Anonymous wrote:No way UVA and WM are on the same level. And Tech engineering is probably above WM but around 65-75% acceptance for non-stem majors.
Anonymous wrote:VT overall offer rate in 2024 was 55%.
Hampden-Sydney is 50%
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I would say Virginia has two: VT (non STEM) and JMU. I don't think MD has any. Most states don't have more than 2 except the ones significantly bigger than Virginia.
JMU should never be compared to VT.
Why? For non-STEM, JMU might be the better option for many.
Better option how? VT has much more respect in the D.C. metro area/VA than JMU. For any major.
Nope. I'm from here.
It's
Tier 1: uva and wm
Tier 2: jmu and vt
Tier 3: gmu, vcu, cnu etc
Anonymous wrote:The VT fanboy got this thread sidetracked, but the question wasn't about who belongs in what tier, but are there any medium selectivity colleges in VA and the answer is yes:
VT (non-STEM): mid 50s overall acceptance rate, but would be higher without STEM majors included.
JMU: 69 percent acceptance rate (27,449 out of 39,776 applicants 2 years ago, acceptance rate almost definately lower for last year).
https://www.jmu.edu/admissions/fastfacts.shtml
Anonymous wrote:I would also put cnu and gmu non cs a step below jmu.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I would say Virginia has two: VT (non STEM) and JMU. I don't think MD has any. Most states don't have more than 2 except the ones significantly bigger than Virginia.
JMU should never be compared to VT.
Why? For non-STEM, JMU might be the better option for many.
Better option how? VT has much more respect in the D.C. metro area/VA than JMU. For any major.
Nope. I'm from here.
It's
Tier 1: uva and wm
Tier 2: jmu and vt
Tier 3: gmu, vcu, cnu etc
JMU in the same tier as VT? Pass me what your drankin'.
This seems more accurate to me:
Tier 1: UVA, W&M, VT Engineering and CS
Tier 2: VT (non-engineering/cs)
Tier 3: JMU, GMU, VCU, CNU
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I would say Virginia has two: VT (non STEM) and JMU. I don't think MD has any. Most states don't have more than 2 except the ones significantly bigger than Virginia.
JMU should never be compared to VT.
Why? For non-STEM, JMU might be the better option for many.
Better option how? VT has much more respect in the D.C. metro area/VA than JMU. For any major.
Nope. I'm from here.
It's
Tier 1: uva and wm
Tier 2: jmu and vt
Tier 3: gmu, vcu, cnu etc
JMU in the same tier as VT? Pass me what your drankin'.