Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:UVA, don’t understand all the hype
The hype is only local. Outside of the DMV it is not as well regarded or known. It is a regional school in that regard.
This is complete bull
I’m surprised the “UVA is regional” poster is still around. Or it’s a kid from rival VT or UMD. UVA is the no 3 public in the US per USNWR. That’s hardly “regional” as UCLA, Berkeley snd Michigan are not regional.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:UVA, don’t understand all the hype
The hype is only local. Outside of the DMV it is not as well regarded or known. It is a regional school in that regard.
This is complete bull
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:UVA, don’t understand all the hype
The hype is only local. Outside of the DMV it is not as well regarded or known. It is a regional school in that regard.
Anonymous wrote:Does any larger national university do tours that aren't the standard- 1) watch a video, 2) hear a short speech from AO about admissions and Q&A, and 3) current student led tour of main quad, student union, library, lecture hall or two, maybe lobby or common area of a dorm for like an hour?
Like visiting a class in session, talking with a faculty member or students in their intended major. Or anything out of the ordinary?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:UVA, don’t understand all the hype
The hype is only local. Outside of the DMV it is not as well regarded or known. It is a regional school in that regard.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:UVA, don’t understand all the hype
The hype is only local. Outside of the DMV it is not as well regarded or known. It is a regional school in that regard.
Anonymous wrote:UVA, don’t understand all the hype
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:UVA, don’t understand all the hype
You need to do more than the crowded 90 min tour. Remember it’s a public school and it doesn’t track internet because UVAdoesn’t have the resources to throw a lot at tracking interest or running tours. If you go, remember it’s a World UNESCO site and plan well out in advance what you want to tour:the Rotinda, Poe’s room, the lawn, the grad schools, if your child is interested, the museums. Go to the particular college your child is interested (we called ahead to head of department to set up a private interview and tour of the College); tour the career center; take the historical tours; go to the mall for dinner; go to the corner for lunch: ask students from your kids’ high school to take them out and show them the town or stay overnight in their room. Don’t just buzz in and expect to get everything from a 90 min tour. With public school you need to be more resourceful and not be sponges. They don’t need you. You need them
Anonymous wrote:It’s so strange to hear how many tour guides are poor representatives. Isn’t there usually a screening process? You would think those types would be weeded out