Anonymous wrote:.
We toured CNU with DD because she wanted a smaller school and we know a couple kids who go there. Her take on it was that CNU felt like the kind of place where the sporty, popular kids from her HS would go, kind of a mini UVA. It wasn't her vibe, she found UMW was a better fit (and preferred W&M to UVA).
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I have a pretty good working knowledge of colleges and universities and while I've mostly focused on small liberal arts schools for my kids, I have no idea what ODU and CNU stand for.
I guess we found a gap in your knowledge. You might want to brush up a bit.
Poster who didn't know what ODU or CNU stand for, do you know what UMW stands for?
NP. I don’t know how you can live in this area, have college aged kids, and not know what those three colleges are.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I have a pretty good working knowledge of colleges and universities and while I've mostly focused on small liberal arts schools for my kids, I have no idea what ODU and CNU stand for.
I guess we found a gap in your knowledge. You might want to brush up a bit.
Poster who didn't know what ODU or CNU stand for, do you know what UMW stands for?
NP. I don’t know how you can live in this area, have college aged kids, and not know what those three colleges are.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I have a pretty good working knowledge of colleges and universities and while I've mostly focused on small liberal arts schools for my kids, I have no idea what ODU and CNU stand for.
I guess we found a gap in your knowledge. You might want to brush up a bit.
Poster who didn't know what ODU or CNU stand for, do you know what UMW stands for?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Can someone give me the back of a napkin on the differences/similarities between these two schools and the type of student they attract?
Size and location, and the resulting diversity or lack thereof, are the biggest differences.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I have a pretty good working knowledge of colleges and universities and while I've mostly focused on small liberal arts schools for my kids, I have no idea what ODU and CNU stand for.
I guess we found a gap in your knowledge. You might want to brush up a bit.
Anonymous wrote:I have a pretty good working knowledge of colleges and universities and while I've mostly focused on small liberal arts schools for my kids, I have no idea what ODU and CNU stand for.
Anonymous wrote:Can someone give me the back of a napkin on the differences/similarities between these two schools and the type of student they attract?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I have a pretty good working knowledge of colleges and universities and while I've mostly focused on small liberal arts schools for my kids, I have no idea what ODU and CNU stand for.
I am always sort of entertained by posts like these, as though they imply something about the schools rather than the person's lack of awareness.
Anonymous wrote:I have a pretty good working knowledge of colleges and universities and while I've mostly focused on small liberal arts schools for my kids, I have no idea what ODU and CNU stand for.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:In addition to some of the differences cited above, ODU has a lot more second-career, military, and part-time students who work. I think it skews older and less traditional in comparison to a place like CNU. There are still younger students and it’s a large university but a certain contingent does fall into that category. They even tout it on their website.
https://www.odu.edu/educational-foundations-leadership/student-profiles
It’s a great thing but can certainly have an impact on the college experience. For example, ODU only has a 50% graduation rate. I think of CNU as being younger, less diverse, preppier, and more traditional. ODU much more diverse with over one-third of students identifying as Black or Hispanic.
To be fair, this is in large part due to 55% of the student body being low/income. VA is great about providing higher ed opportunities for everyone
Anonymous wrote:In addition to some of the differences cited above, ODU has a lot more second-career, military, and part-time students who work. I think it skews older and less traditional in comparison to a place like CNU. There are still younger students and it’s a large university but a certain contingent does fall into that category. They even tout it on their website.
https://www.odu.edu/educational-foundations-leadership/student-profiles
It’s a great thing but can certainly have an impact on the college experience. For example, ODU only has a 50% graduation rate. I think of CNU as being younger, less diverse, preppier, and more traditional. ODU much more diverse with over one-third of students identifying as Black or Hispanic.