Anonymous wrote:Cal.
I know will say that’s not a safety, but it was for this kid. And they absolutely loved it.
Anonymous wrote:Umdcp is not a safety for anyone. Acceptance rate has to be higher than 50-60% to be a safety.
Get over yourself. It is a safety for many kids. You don’t get to decide what other people define as a safety for them.
Anonymous wrote:I’m only asking if it was considered a true safety, not target, reach, first choice, etc.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Elon
+100
Excellent science and pre-health instruction + guidance.
I’m glad to see all the call-outs for Elon. My kid is in there and no others yet (which is not what we expected) - like many we are still surprised by the reality of the college process there days).
Anonymous wrote:I second the request for more UVM stories! It's DD's top pick right now.
Umdcp is not a safety for anyone. Acceptance rate has to be higher than 50-60% to be a safety.
Safety is relative. And, if you have really high stats, you should be good at UMD (EA of course). It was a safety for my kid last year. 4.83W, 1570 SAT, lots of honors, ECs.
But, I agree generally that UMD is not a safety school. It just might fill that slot for some kids, though.
Then anybody can jump into this thread, and say bunch of T50 schools are safeties.
It defeats the purpose of the thread
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:George Mason University!
Please tell me what your kid ended up loving about it. I'm serious. I've wanted to like it for my first kid, and despite multiple visits, it just seemed half-ass'd... but that may be more a factor of they way they host their visits, and not indicative of the actual student experience. For my second kid, GMU seems like an obvious choice b/c he really doesn't care about the "traditional college/college town" experience, and it'd be quite convenient for him to be at college close by.
So, can you tell me about the good experience your kid had.
My kid had a different experience because they were an athlete, so they had built in activities and a group of friends. But I will say, having had several kids at other schools in the Northeast we were very impressed with how they have stepped things up in the past 10 years or so by building more dorms, etc. And I think if my kid was interested in STEM, that would make it an even stronger candidate. We have relatives who live in the DC area, so we knew it was considered a suitcase school. I know this thread is about safeties so full disclosure, GM was a match and they seemed to get a great education. My kid also had a great social life, that admittedly may have been due to the team aspect. They loved taking the metro in to Ballston and DC to go out to bars (pre-Covid). If your kid would like to be closer to home, and you live in VA I think it's an excellent option. I also have a friend who lives in Nova, her kid found his people there and had a great experience too. I think that's been the key for all my kids-find your group and you will have a good experience.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Elon
+100
Excellent science and pre-health instruction + guidance.
I’m glad to see all the call-outs for Elon. My kid is in there and no others yet (which is not what we expected) - like many we are still surprised by the reality of the college process there days).
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:George Mason University!
Please tell me what your kid ended up loving about it. I'm serious. I've wanted to like it for my first kid, and despite multiple visits, it just seemed half-ass'd... but that may be more a factor of they way they host their visits, and not indicative of the actual student experience. For my second kid, GMU seems like an obvious choice b/c he really doesn't care about the "traditional college/college town" experience, and it'd be quite convenient for him to be at college close by.
So, can you tell me about the good experience your kid had.