Anonymous wrote:Freshman retention rate -
Roanoke 73.8%
CNU 85%
Anonymous wrote:Roanoke is a national liberal arts college while CNU is a regional institution per USNWR.
Anonymous wrote:Roanoke.
Aside from academics though, if they like the beach CNU, if they like the mountains, Roanoke.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The part of NN near CNU is safe.
Students in any town or city should be aware of their surroundings esp at night.
Are you aware of the history of that neighborhood?
Yes. And nothing in that URL makes CNU unsafe.
That’s not my point. Were the actions taken to create CNU ethical?
OMG. Should we discuss virtually every university in the country and their "ethics"? Go away.
If you can’t offer a serious response maybe you should go away.
You're not a serious person to start with. Run along.
You’re making sarcastic comments, not me. Is that how you cope with topics that make you uncomfortable?
This topic doesn't make me uncomfortable. Tell us, where do your kids attend college?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The part of NN near CNU is safe.
Students in any town or city should be aware of their surroundings esp at night.
Are you aware of the history of that neighborhood?
https://www.essence.com/news/virginia-black-community-christopher-newport-university/
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The part of NN near CNU is safe.
Students in any town or city should be aware of their surroundings esp at night.
Are you aware of the history of that neighborhood?
Yes. And nothing in that URL makes CNU unsafe.
That’s not my point. Were the actions taken to create CNU ethical?
OMG. Should we discuss virtually every university in the country and their "ethics"? Go away.
If you can’t offer a serious response maybe you should go away.
You're not a serious person to start with. Run along.
You’re making sarcastic comments, not me. Is that how you cope with topics that make you uncomfortable?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The part of NN near CNU is safe.
Students in any town or city should be aware of their surroundings esp at night.
Are you aware of the history of that neighborhood?
Yes. And nothing in that URL makes CNU unsafe.
That’s not my point. Were the actions taken to create CNU ethical?
OMG. Should we discuss virtually every university in the country and their "ethics"? Go away.
If you can’t offer a serious response maybe you should go away.
You're not a serious person to start with. Run along.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The part of NN near CNU is safe.
Students in any town or city should be aware of their surroundings esp at night.
Are you aware of the history of that neighborhood?
https://www.essence.com/news/virginia-black-community-christopher-newport-university/
So we should close the university?
They could require a service trip to a diverse neighborhood as part of orientation.
I’m imagining them bussing 900 freshmen to some “diverse neighborhood” during freshman orientation. What would you like these 18 year olds to do there? Pick up trash? Play with the children? Teach those diverse residents about Virginia history? Make sandwiches? You sound kind of racist thinking that the students need to be forced to do a service trip to learn about diversity.
Who said it’s about learning diversity? Maybe it’s a form of giving back to a community that was harmed. I’m sure the students could give this project more thoughtful consideration than your apparent limited creativity.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The part of NN near CNU is safe.
Students in any town or city should be aware of their surroundings esp at night.
Are you aware of the history of that neighborhood?
Yes. And nothing in that URL makes CNU unsafe.
That’s not my point. Were the actions taken to create CNU ethical?
OMG. Should we discuss virtually every university in the country and their "ethics"? Go away.
If you can’t offer a serious response maybe you should go away.