Anonymous wrote:For this region: Indiana/Bloomington, Colorado/Boulder, Arizona, Iowa, Oregon, New Hampshire. All are good state flagships, with solid programs, attractive campuses, nice towns, and a mix of in-state and OOS students. And each has an acceptance rate above 79% (... because some students don't have a serious shot at Harvard or UCLA or maybe even College Park). As a native Californian, it's surprised me how quickly people in this region (who aren't resource-constrained) are prepared to write off those fine state flagships based on either their stereotyped image of the state (despite university towns usually being political anomalies, wherever they're located), or the duration of the plane ride, or the assumption that a high acceptance rate must automatically mean sub-par education quality. And they instead start adjusting their sights to lesser state schools (esp in the mid-Atlantic or South), or to second-tier/regional campuses, or to financially weak SLACs -- all located within a state or two of DC. Californians think nothing of traveling a time zone or more away for college - why is that here in the DMV people seem to think that's something you'd only ever do for a "T20" school?
Anonymous wrote:My kids didn't want to go there so I don't have personal experience, but one of my relatives sent two kids to Wofford, both are in Med School now and they weren't rocket scientists by any means.
Anonymous wrote:As someone that graduated from ODU way back in the olden times of 2000, I am happy to finally see someone say positive things about here! Granted, I ended up there because of my sport, but I loved it and it's 100000 times better now.
PS - My "outcome" has been just fine despite what people might think, lol.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Not hidden, but JMU undergrad business school is a gem. It was my son's safety, but he chose it over other higher ranked schools, and it has exceeded expectations. Definitely will be harder to get into in 10 years.
What’s JMU
James Madison University
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Denison, Grinnell and Vassar
Odd response. These are not hidden gems at all. They're well-known schools with competitive admissions.
Well, I know a kid that was rejected by TU, F&M and St Olaf, TU was dream univ for him. However he was selected by Vassar, and Grinnell.. he had a real tough time on which one to accept.. finally went with Grinnell
TU as in Trinity U in San Antonio?
That is so odd
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:St. Mary's College of Maryland, lovely little school. Gorgeous location on the water.
It’s my kid’s top choice after a visit this fall. Beautiful place, LAC offerings, and in-state tuition. And I keep running into people I admire who either went there or whose kids went there, so it feels like it is doing something right!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Can confirm, Scranton, St. Joe's, Dayton, all Jesuit (or maybe Catholic) schools that have happy kids and very solid academics. My kids go to Catholic school and these are popular picks. So is Fairfield, but that is a little more selective.
Dayton is Marianist, not Jesuit.
But I can confirm it's a gem.
Just a +1 for Dayton. I grew up in Dayton in the University is a treasured part of the city. The business community backs the teams and games are well-attended and fun. Great school, plenty of fun “college scene” but not too much!
Anonymous wrote:Did we miss Gettysburg?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:St. Mary's College of Maryland, lovely little school. Gorgeous location on the water.
It’s my kid’s top choice after a visit this fall. Beautiful place, LAC offerings, and in-state tuition. And I keep running into people I admire who either went there or whose kids went there, so it feels like it is doing something right!
Anonymous wrote:St. Mary's College of Maryland, lovely little school. Gorgeous location on the water.