Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We currently live in DC and have two Middle Schoolers in private Middle School. We want to move in the next few years before the kids are in high school - we currently live in DC far away from the kids school and moving to NW DC would be most convenient. However, we want to consider all options.
Are kids from Northern VA considered in-state for purposes of admission or are they evaluated against others at their DC private school? Asked another way, if they apply to UVA or W&M, is there a better shot of admission if they have a VA address vs a DC address? Or does high school matter more?
I understand there is a financial benefit to being in-state, I'm specifically asking about admissions.
Kids who LIVE in Virginia are in state residents with an admissions advantage. I'm sure you can look this up.
This is a big part of why we live in VA.
Isn't the primary benefit of living in VA and going to an in state school to get in state tuition? Since the academic threshold would be the same for admissions, I'm not sure I understand why people are saying it would be easier to get in if you live in state vs out of state. Wouldn't it depend on the caliber of people applying to the school (in state vs out of state)?
Anonymous wrote:For the class of 2028, the instate and OOS acceptance rates were the same at 34%.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We currently live in DC and have two Middle Schoolers in private Middle School. We want to move in the next few years before the kids are in high school - we currently live in DC far away from the kids school and moving to NW DC would be most convenient. However, we want to consider all options.
Are kids from Northern VA considered in-state for purposes of admission or are they evaluated against others at their DC private school? Asked another way, if they apply to UVA or W&M, is there a better shot of admission if they have a VA address vs a DC address? Or does high school matter more?
I understand there is a financial benefit to being in-state, I'm specifically asking about admissions.
Kids who LIVE in Virginia are in state residents with an admissions advantage. I'm sure you can look this up.
This is a big part of why we live in VA.
Anonymous wrote:Because they stated that data was for William and Mary.
Anonymous wrote:Because they stated that data was for William and Mary.
Anonymous wrote:For the class of 2028, the instate and OOS acceptance rates were the same at 34%.
Anonymous wrote:We currently live in DC and have two Middle Schoolers in private Middle School. We want to move in the next few years before the kids are in high school - we currently live in DC far away from the kids school and moving to NW DC would be most convenient. However, we want to consider all options.
Are kids from Northern VA considered in-state for purposes of admission or are they evaluated against others at their DC private school? Asked another way, if they apply to UVA or W&M, is there a better shot of admission if they have a VA address vs a DC address? Or does high school matter more?
I understand there is a financial benefit to being in-state, I'm specifically asking about admissions.
Anonymous wrote:For the class of 2028, the instate and OOS acceptance rates were the same at 34%.