Anonymous wrote:Indiana - we loved it! My favorite college visit. Miami of Ohio is also a great option is you want smaller.
Anonymous wrote:i really don’t understand parents like the OP. When my son was applying to schools 2 years go, he was determining what type of school he wanted to apply to. Not us. It isn’t my future and life to live. He’s now very happy at his choice which is VT and most importantly has a great internship lined up for the summer.
Anonymous wrote:If you are interested in large public in a beautiful area - University of Utah. In-state tuition by sophomore year. R1 Research. Lots of other pluses.
Anonymous wrote:Looking for true safeties. I figure, we're in state for Virginia, why not go with GMU or VCU. Spouse wants to look farther afield at high admit privates like Elon, Gonzaga, or Loyola Maryland. I guess I don't see the point in going private at that level? What would those schools offer that VCU wouldn't? Cost isn't a factor.
Anonymous wrote:Looking for true safeties. I figure, we're in state for Virginia, why not go with GMU or VCU. Spouse wants to look farther afield at high admit privates like Elon, Gonzaga, or Loyola Maryland. I guess I don't see the point in going private at that level? What would those schools offer that VCU wouldn't? Cost isn't a factor.
Anonymous wrote:Gonzaga has D1 basketball and small class sizes in engineering.
Anonymous wrote:i really don’t understand parents like the OP. When my son was applying to schools 2 years go, he was determining what type of school he wanted to apply to. Not us. It isn’t my future and life to live. He’s now very happy at his choice which is VT and most importantly has a great internship lined up for the summer.
Anonymous wrote:Depends.
If they're true ultra-safeties your kid has a good change of dramatically reduced tuition and honors. Which affords a community but the overall cohort is less strong.
I'd actually say that at less selective colleges the more important thing is the size: if your kid is smart and using it as a super safety and there are only 2000 undergrads they are far less likely to find other kids like them. At a very large safety (likely a state school) they will find similar kids who attended for a variety of reasons.
I teach at one of these schools that is smaller. It's nice for a lot of kids and a let down for others. The very capable tend to easily rise to the top and thrive or leave early.
Anonymous wrote:Looking for true safeties. I figure, we're in state for Virginia, why not go with GMU or VCU. Spouse wants to look farther afield at high admit privates like Elon, Gonzaga, or Loyola Maryland. I guess I don't see the point in going private at that level? What would those schools offer that VCU wouldn't? Cost isn't a factor.