Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Thank you for the ideas. I’ll be watching the results here this year. Is there an easy way to determine if they are direct admit to your specific (at least intended) engineering major? Or is no major guaranteed?
At VT, all engineering majors are accepted to general engineering. You are guaranteed your first choice at the end of freshman year if you meet a minimum gpa. I can't remember the number, but they say the large majority of students get their first choice.
+1. and VT is a weed-out program unlike UVA
Anonymous wrote:If considering VT & UVA, encourage him to take multi-variable calculus (if offered) in addition to Calculus BC.
It really will depend on the caliber and number of students applying from his high school.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I don't recommend ODU for a high stats student like this.
Lowest I would recommend is Penn State for someone with these stats. Guaranteed acceptance to PS w/ these numbers.
Can I ask why? As long as the program is ABET accredited, should it matter?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I don't recommend ODU for a high stats student like this.
Lowest I would recommend is Penn State for someone with these stats. Guaranteed acceptance to PS w/ these numbers.
Anonymous wrote:I have a NOVA junior hoping to stay within 6 hours of home for college, the closer the better. He currently has a 4.3 and 1550(800 math). He won’t take the SAT again and I imagine his GPA will stay about the same. This page leads me to believe he won’t get into Tech or UVA. Naviance is unclear thanks to wait listing all over the place. He is thinking of NC, Penn State or Pitt, but in state tuition would be better. He’s not looking for a commuter school.
Are there other in state programs he should consider? Where are kids getting in with his stats? What does direct admit to engineering mean-Don’t all schools require a certain GPA to get your first choice? If not, what are those schools!?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I have a NOVA junior hoping to stay within 6 hours of home for college, the closer the better. He currently has a 4.3 and 1550(800 math). He won’t take the SAT again and I imagine his GPA will stay about the same. This page leads me to believe he won’t get into Tech or UVA. Naviance is unclear thanks to wait listing all over the place. He is thinking of NC, Penn State or Pitt, but in state tuition would be better. He’s not looking for a commuter school.
Are there other in state programs he should consider? Where are kids getting in with his stats? What does direct admit to engineering mean-Don’t all schools require a certain GPA to get your first choice? If not, what are those schools!?
Is this a serious post? Those numbers are a lock at Tech and better than 50/50 at UVA.
Unfortunately they don’t look like a lock on Naviance. He’ll be scraping the bottom of UVA admissions and VT has waitlists all around his scores. We are hopeful that one of those will come through but want to have options. He doesn’t have all As and I don’t expect him to get all As this year.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I have a NOVA junior hoping to stay within 6 hours of home for college, the closer the better. He currently has a 4.3 and 1550(800 math). He won’t take the SAT again and I imagine his GPA will stay about the same. This page leads me to believe he won’t get into Tech or UVA. Naviance is unclear thanks to wait listing all over the place. He is thinking of NC, Penn State or Pitt, but in state tuition would be better. He’s not looking for a commuter school.
Are there other in state programs he should consider? Where are kids getting in with his stats? What does direct admit to engineering mean-Don’t all schools require a certain GPA to get your first choice? If not, what are those schools!?
Is this a serious post? Those numbers are a lock at Tech and better than 50/50 at UVA.
Anonymous wrote:GMU, ODU, VCU
Anonymous wrote:I don't recommend ODU for a high stats student like this.