Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I'm not sure why I come on here to find useful information. The folks posting on the College threads are such smug, judgmental dicks. Can't have a thread without someone putting a school, or those who choose it, down.
Yep. I have to remember that the usual a-holes who do this aren’t representative of most normal people in the real world. Thankfully.
Anonymous wrote:We are from non-DCUM Virginia, and DD was in the Honors College at GMU. She was happy overall, and I tried to remember what she enjoyed/complained about below.
Positives:
-Dorms were newer and very nice
Honors College: curriculum compacts gen ed requirements (resulting in more room to play with schedule/double major/minor), provides a smaller community, confers priority registration, advisors were good
-Access to DC for internships throughout the school year (critical for her major)
-Diversity
-Greek life is there if you want it but not a big deal if you don’t want to be involved — DD wasn’t interested but friends who were didn’t seem consumed by it
Negatives
-Food wasn’t great, but mitigated once moving to a suite with a kitchen
-Only one shopping center walkable from campus otherwise need to take shuttle or have a car (parking is $$)
-Long commute for the internships mentioned as a positive (she agrees worth it in the end because other admissions she considered seriously were GW and AU, but GMU was so much less expensive)
Anonymous wrote:Neighbor went and loved it - CS kid. I know several adjunct professors - GMU gets very high quality adjuncts from DC area - can make for good job connections.
Anonymous wrote:I'm not sure why I come on here to find useful information. The folks posting on the College threads are such smug, judgmental dicks. Can't have a thread without someone putting a school, or those who choose it, down.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Like any college, it is what you make it. I grew up in Arlington and went to Mason. I lived on campus for 2 years and then got a townhouse within walking distance with friends. It was no different than being anywhere else. I joined a sorority, went to frat parties, was a tour guide, was in the dance company, on a club sport team, and I loved it.
An introvert can struggle on any college campus as easily as an extrovert can thrive on any college campus. GMU has everything any other large college does except for football tailgates. Students don’t really come together over the sports like they do at big 10 or SEC schools.
This! GMU was a great experience for our DD who lived in the dorms all four years. GMU has an xlnt computer science program (off the top of my head the best known are: engineering; animation; serious game design; economics and computer science, but it is huge so there is something for everyone. She had no interest in greek but made friends in her major and dorm. All of her friends lived on campus except one whose parents leased a townhouse near campus (it can be expensive). There are a lot of graduate students on campus, as well. It is getting more difficult to get in, year by year. I know several Nova families who were disappointed. 75th percentile for enrolled students last year had a 3.9; the median was a 3.7, and the bottom 25th percentile had a 3.4. ACT was 30 at 75th percentile, which is where you need to be if applying from Nova. Check out the Honors program if you qualify. It provides distinct perks. One of the nice things about GMU is that the Commonwealth keeps pumping money into it to grow so DD's dorms were like hotel rooms. The computer department was state of the art. The downside is that she experienced never-ending construction while she was there.
Baloney. Mason accepted 84 percent of FCPS applicants last year and 86 percent of Arlington applicants. No way these kids all had a 30 on the ACT!
Fine, believe what you want. But the 75th percentile for entering students last year was a 30. Period. I know quite a few disappointed families who didn't get in. All Virginia and NOVA.
Dude, you're the one pushing SCHEV. It shows that 85 percent from NOVA got in, and that 2/3 of the student body is from NOVA! So you can't know that many rejects.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Like any college, it is what you make it. I grew up in Arlington and went to Mason. I lived on campus for 2 years and then got a townhouse within walking distance with friends. It was no different than being anywhere else. I joined a sorority, went to frat parties, was a tour guide, was in the dance company, on a club sport team, and I loved it.
An introvert can struggle on any college campus as easily as an extrovert can thrive on any college campus. GMU has everything any other large college does except for football tailgates. Students don’t really come together over the sports like they do at big 10 or SEC schools.
This! GMU was a great experience for our DD who lived in the dorms all four years. GMU has an xlnt computer science program (off the top of my head the best known are: engineering; animation; serious game design; economics and computer science, but it is huge so there is something for everyone. She had no interest in greek but made friends in her major and dorm. All of her friends lived on campus except one whose parents leased a townhouse near campus (it can be expensive). There are a lot of graduate students on campus, as well. It is getting more difficult to get in, year by year. I know several Nova families who were disappointed. 75th percentile for enrolled students last year had a 3.9; the median was a 3.7, and the bottom 25th percentile had a 3.4. ACT was 30 at 75th percentile, which is where you need to be if applying from Nova. Check out the Honors program if you qualify. It provides distinct perks. One of the nice things about GMU is that the Commonwealth keeps pumping money into it to grow so DD's dorms were like hotel rooms. The computer department was state of the art. The downside is that she experienced never-ending construction while she was there.
Baloney. Mason accepted 84 percent of FCPS applicants last year and 86 percent of Arlington applicants. No way these kids all had a 30 on the ACT!
Fine, believe what you want. But the 75th percentile for entering students last year was a 30. Period. I know quite a few disappointed families who didn't get in. All Virginia and NOVA.
Dude, you're the one pushing SCHEV. It shows that 85 percent from NOVA got in, and that 2/3 of the student body is from NOVA! So you can't know that many rejects.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Like any college, it is what you make it. I grew up in Arlington and went to Mason. I lived on campus for 2 years and then got a townhouse within walking distance with friends. It was no different than being anywhere else. I joined a sorority, went to frat parties, was a tour guide, was in the dance company, on a club sport team, and I loved it.
An introvert can struggle on any college campus as easily as an extrovert can thrive on any college campus. GMU has everything any other large college does except for football tailgates. Students don’t really come together over the sports like they do at big 10 or SEC schools.
This! GMU was a great experience for our DD who lived in the dorms all four years. GMU has an xlnt computer science program (off the top of my head the best known are: engineering; animation; serious game design; economics and computer science, but it is huge so there is something for everyone. She had no interest in greek but made friends in her major and dorm. All of her friends lived on campus except one whose parents leased a townhouse near campus (it can be expensive). There are a lot of graduate students on campus, as well. It is getting more difficult to get in, year by year. I know several Nova families who were disappointed. 75th percentile for enrolled students last year had a 3.9; the median was a 3.7, and the bottom 25th percentile had a 3.4. ACT was 30 at 75th percentile, which is where you need to be if applying from Nova. Check out the Honors program if you qualify. It provides distinct perks. One of the nice things about GMU is that the Commonwealth keeps pumping money into it to grow so DD's dorms were like hotel rooms. The computer department was state of the art. The downside is that she experienced never-ending construction while she was there.
Baloney. Mason accepted 84 percent of FCPS applicants last year and 86 percent of Arlington applicants. No way these kids all had a 30 on the ACT!
Fine, believe what you want. But the 75th percentile for entering students last year was a 30. Period. I know quite a few disappointed families who didn't get in. All Virginia and NOVA.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Like any college, it is what you make it. I grew up in Arlington and went to Mason. I lived on campus for 2 years and then got a townhouse within walking distance with friends. It was no different than being anywhere else. I joined a sorority, went to frat parties, was a tour guide, was in the dance company, on a club sport team, and I loved it.
An introvert can struggle on any college campus as easily as an extrovert can thrive on any college campus. GMU has everything any other large college does except for football tailgates. Students don’t really come together over the sports like they do at big 10 or SEC schools.
This! GMU was a great experience for our DD who lived in the dorms all four years. GMU has an xlnt computer science program (off the top of my head the best known are: engineering; animation; serious game design; economics and computer science, but it is huge so there is something for everyone. She had no interest in greek but made friends in her major and dorm. All of her friends lived on campus except one whose parents leased a townhouse near campus (it can be expensive). There are a lot of graduate students on campus, as well. It is getting more difficult to get in, year by year. I know several Nova families who were disappointed. 75th percentile for enrolled students last year had a 3.9; the median was a 3.7, and the bottom 25th percentile had a 3.4. ACT was 30 at 75th percentile, which is where you need to be if applying from Nova. Check out the Honors program if you qualify. It provides distinct perks. One of the nice things about GMU is that the Commonwealth keeps pumping money into it to grow so DD's dorms were like hotel rooms. The computer department was state of the art. The downside is that she experienced never-ending construction while she was there.
Baloney. Mason accepted 84 percent of FCPS applicants last year and 86 percent of Arlington applicants. No way these kids all had a 30 on the ACT!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I'm not sure why I come on here to find useful information. The folks posting on the College threads are such smug, judgmental dicks. Can't have a thread without someone putting a school, or those who choose it, down.
Don't leave out sentencing your kids to a lifetime of minimum wage work if they are B students.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Like any college, it is what you make it. I grew up in Arlington and went to Mason. I lived on campus for 2 years and then got a townhouse within walking distance with friends. It was no different than being anywhere else. I joined a sorority, went to frat parties, was a tour guide, was in the dance company, on a club sport team, and I loved it.
An introvert can struggle on any college campus as easily as an extrovert can thrive on any college campus. GMU has everything any other large college does except for football tailgates. Students don’t really come together over the sports like they do at big 10 or SEC schools.
This! GMU was a great experience for our DD who lived in the dorms all four years. GMU has an xlnt computer science program (off the top of my head the best known are: engineering; animation; serious game design; economics and computer science, but it is huge so there is something for everyone. She had no interest in greek but made friends in her major and dorm. All of her friends lived on campus except one whose parents leased a townhouse near campus (it can be expensive). There are a lot of graduate students on campus, as well. It is getting more difficult to get in, year by year. I know several Nova families who were disappointed. 75th percentile for enrolled students last year had a 3.9; the median was a 3.7, and the bottom 25th percentile had a 3.4. ACT was 30 at 75th percentile, which is where you need to be if applying from Nova. Check out the Honors program if you qualify. It provides distinct perks. One of the nice things about GMU is that the Commonwealth keeps pumping money into it to grow so DD's dorms were like hotel rooms. The computer department was state of the art. The downside is that she experienced never-ending construction while she was there.
Baloney. Mason accepted 84 percent of FCPS applicants last year and 86 percent of Arlington applicants. No way these kids all had a 30 on the ACT!
Apparently you are new at this. This is SCHEV. State Council of Higher Education. Here is the link to GMU with the 30 mentioned at the 75th percentile. My DC had a 32. You should also know that the percentage of acceptances in Virginia are inflated due to the fact that the public high school counselors (paid by the state and have a reputation to consider with these institutions) guides the Virginia students to the most appropriate Virginia school. They will not be encouraging if you have a B+ student. They will not file a satisfactory letter of recommendation (and yes they do write one). And they certainly will not sign off on the most rigorous box. It is their job to match public high school students with the best public universities if that is the route the parents choose.
Insert any private or public four year institution and you can see last year's incoming stats of students who actually arrived. It is a very useful tool for parents in Virginia. https://research.schev.edu/enrollment/B10_FreshmenProfile.asp
Ah, SCHEV poster. How we've missed you.
Anonymous wrote:I'm not sure why I come on here to find useful information. The folks posting on the College threads are such smug, judgmental dicks. Can't have a thread without someone putting a school, or those who choose it, down.