Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I'm not sure where your OOS numbers are coming from, but from UVA's website:
68% Virginian
32% Non-Virginian
Estimated Tuition
$11,892
2016-17 1st?Year Students, In?State, College of Arts & Sciences
$40,506
2016-17 1st?Year Students, Out?of?State, College of Arts & Sciences
The problem with state schools is that the in-state students are going to be fairly average. Even a good school like UVA is accepting over 40% of in-state applicants.....not exactly the best and brightest.
I get so tired of people quoting this statistic as a way to argue that the kids getting into UVA are not that bright. Ninety-four percent of them are in the top ten percent of their graduating class - if they aren't the state's best and brightest, I don't know who is.
In my own personal experience of having 3 DCs from NOVA in top private and top public HSs apply to colleges over the past 4 years, I can unequivocally state that the students I know who were admitted to UVA were exactly the best and brighest. These same students were admitted to all of the Ivies, Duke, Stanford, MIT, top 10 SLACs, etc. Some chose UVA, some chose one of these other schools for a variety of reasons, including financial. If you think that is fairly average you're nuts.
Yes, the ~10 students from my kid's school who got into Ivies (or equivalent) also got into UVA. An additional 30-40 kids who couldn't sniff the Ivies also got into UVA. Those are the kids that will be attending.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I'm not sure where your OOS numbers are coming from, but from UVA's website:
68% Virginian
32% Non-Virginian
Estimated Tuition
$11,892
2016-17 1st?Year Students, In?State, College of Arts & Sciences
$40,506
2016-17 1st?Year Students, Out?of?State, College of Arts & Sciences
The problem with state schools is that the in-state students are going to be fairly average. Even a good school like UVA is accepting over 40% of in-state applicants.....not exactly the best and brightest.
I get so tired of people quoting this statistic as a way to argue that the kids getting into UVA are not that bright. Ninety-four percent of them are in the top ten percent of their graduating class - if they aren't the state's best and brightest, I don't know who is.
In my own personal experience of having 3 DCs from NOVA in top private and top public HSs apply to colleges over the past 4 years, I can unequivocally state that the students I know who were admitted to UVA were exactly the best and brighest. These same students were admitted to all of the Ivies, Duke, Stanford, MIT, top 10 SLACs, etc. Some chose UVA, some chose one of these other schools for a variety of reasons, including financial. If you think that is fairly average you're nuts.
Yes, they may very well be the state's best and brightest but that isn't saying much. You understand the difference between having to fish in the small VA applicant pool vs. the broader applicant pool?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I'm not sure where your OOS numbers are coming from, but from UVA's website:
68% Virginian
32% Non-Virginian
Estimated Tuition
$11,892
2016-17 1st?Year Students, In?State, College of Arts & Sciences
$40,506
2016-17 1st?Year Students, Out?of?State, College of Arts & Sciences
The problem with state schools is that the in-state students are going to be fairly average. Even a good school like UVA is accepting over 40% of in-state applicants.....not exactly the best and brightest.
I get so tired of people quoting this statistic as a way to argue that the kids getting into UVA are not that bright. Ninety-four percent of them are in the top ten percent of their graduating class - if they aren't the state's best and brightest, I don't know who is.
In my own personal experience of having 3 DCs from NOVA in top private and top public HSs apply to colleges over the past 4 years, I can unequivocally state that the students I know who were admitted to UVA were exactly the best and brighest. These same students were admitted to all of the Ivies, Duke, Stanford, MIT, top 10 SLACs, etc. Some chose UVA, some chose one of these other schools for a variety of reasons, including financial. If you think that is fairly average you're nuts.
Yes, the ~10 students from my kid's school who got into Ivies (or equivalent) also got into UVA. An additional 30-40 kids who couldn't sniff the Ivies also got into UVA. Those are the kids that will be attending.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I'm not sure where your OOS numbers are coming from, but from UVA's website:
68% Virginian
32% Non-Virginian
Estimated Tuition
$11,892
2016-17 1st?Year Students, In?State, College of Arts & Sciences
$40,506
2016-17 1st?Year Students, Out?of?State, College of Arts & Sciences
The problem with state schools is that the in-state students are going to be fairly average. Even a good school like UVA is accepting over 40% of in-state applicants.....not exactly the best and brightest.
I get so tired of people quoting this statistic as a way to argue that the kids getting into UVA are not that bright. Ninety-four percent of them are in the top ten percent of their graduating class - if they aren't the state's best and brightest, I don't know who is.
In my own personal experience of having 3 DCs from NOVA in top private and top public HSs apply to colleges over the past 4 years, I can unequivocally state that the students I know who were admitted to UVA were exactly the best and brighest. These same students were admitted to all of the Ivies, Duke, Stanford, MIT, top 10 SLACs, etc. Some chose UVA, some chose one of these other schools for a variety of reasons, including financial. If you think that is fairly average you're nuts.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I'm not sure where your OOS numbers are coming from, but from UVA's website:
68% Virginian
32% Non-Virginian
Estimated Tuition
$11,892
2016-17 1st?Year Students, In?State, College of Arts & Sciences
$40,506
2016-17 1st?Year Students, Out?of?State, College of Arts & Sciences
The problem with state schools is that the in-state students are going to be fairly average. Even a good school like UVA is accepting over 40% of in-state applicants.....not exactly the best and brightest.
I get so tired of people quoting this statistic as a way to argue that the kids getting into UVA are not that bright. Ninety-four percent of them are in the top ten percent of their graduating class - if they aren't the state's best and brightest, I don't know who is.
In my own personal experience of having 3 DCs from NOVA in top private and top public HSs apply to colleges over the past 4 years, I can unequivocally state that the students I know who were admitted to UVA were exactly the best and brighest. These same students were admitted to all of the Ivies, Duke, Stanford, MIT, top 10 SLACs, etc. Some chose UVA, some chose one of these other schools for a variety of reasons, including financial. If you think that is fairly average you're nuts.
How can you compare the selectivity of the ivies which for the most part have acceptance rates of under 10% with UVA's in-state acceptance rate of 40%? That means UVA takes four times as many applicants from VA.....how can that not impact the quality of the student body? It's one thing to be defensive but it's entirely another to be ignorant of the facts.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I'm not sure where your OOS numbers are coming from, but from UVA's website:
68% Virginian
32% Non-Virginian
Estimated Tuition
$11,892
2016-17 1st?Year Students, In?State, College of Arts & Sciences
$40,506
2016-17 1st?Year Students, Out?of?State, College of Arts & Sciences
The problem with state schools is that the in-state students are going to be fairly average. Even a good school like UVA is accepting over 40% of in-state applicants.....not exactly the best and brightest.
I get so tired of people quoting this statistic as a way to argue that the kids getting into UVA are not that bright. Ninety-four percent of them are in the top ten percent of their graduating class - if they aren't the state's best and brightest, I don't know who is.
In my own personal experience of having 3 DCs from NOVA in top private and top public HSs apply to colleges over the past 4 years, I can unequivocally state that the students I know who were admitted to UVA were exactly the best and brighest. These same students were admitted to all of the Ivies, Duke, Stanford, MIT, top 10 SLACs, etc. Some chose UVA, some chose one of these other schools for a variety of reasons, including financial. If you think that is fairly average you're nuts.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I'm not sure where your OOS numbers are coming from, but from UVA's website:
68% Virginian
32% Non-Virginian
Estimated Tuition
$11,892
2016-17 1st?Year Students, In?State, College of Arts & Sciences
$40,506
2016-17 1st?Year Students, Out?of?State, College of Arts & Sciences
The problem with state schools is that the in-state students are going to be fairly average. Even a good school like UVA is accepting over 40% of in-state applicants.....not exactly the best and brightest.
I get so tired of people quoting this statistic as a way to argue that the kids getting into UVA are not that bright. Ninety-four percent of them are in the top ten percent of their graduating class - if they aren't the state's best and brightest, I don't know who is.
In my own personal experience of having 3 DCs from NOVA in top private and top public HSs apply to colleges over the past 4 years, I can unequivocally state that the students I know who were admitted to UVA were exactly the best and brighest. These same students were admitted to all of the Ivies, Duke, Stanford, MIT, top 10 SLACs, etc. Some chose UVA, some chose one of these other schools for a variety of reasons, including financial. If you think that is fairly average you're nuts.
Anonymous wrote:39% this year.Anonymous wrote:The problem with state schools is that the in-state students are going to be fairly average. Even a good school like UVA is accepting over 40% of in-state applicants.....not exactly the best and brightest.
39% this year.Anonymous wrote:The problem with state schools is that the in-state students are going to be fairly average. Even a good school like UVA is accepting over 40% of in-state applicants.....not exactly the best and brightest.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I'm not sure where your OOS numbers are coming from, but from UVA's website:
68% Virginian
32% Non-Virginian
Estimated Tuition
$11,892
2016-17 1st?Year Students, In?State, College of Arts & Sciences
$40,506
2016-17 1st?Year Students, Out?of?State, College of Arts & Sciences
The problem with state schools is that the in-state students are going to be fairly average. Even a good school like UVA is accepting over 40% of in-state applicants.....not exactly the best and brightest.
Anonymous wrote:I'm not sure where your OOS numbers are coming from, but from UVA's website:
68% Virginian
32% Non-Virginian
Estimated Tuition
$11,892
2016-17 1st?Year Students, In?State, College of Arts & Sciences
$40,506
2016-17 1st?Year Students, Out?of?State, College of Arts & Sciences
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You're confusing people who go to UVA with people who were accepted. For those 676 who go to UVA, there are probably about 600 more who were accepted and declined went to other schools.It can onlytake so many student (this year @676) from No. VA. 76 of those alone (mostly Asian Americans) come from T.J.
I don't' think I'm confusing anything. Scroll down to Enrolled by county. 670 from FCPS, 200 Loudon, etc., down to zero or one from the outlying west and southern counties. http://digital.uvamagazine.org/articles/2020-insight/. I don't know anyone who has turned down UVA for another school except for one truly exceptional student who received both the Jefferson Scholar offer and Princeton. He chose Princeton full freight over the Jefferson (free ride).
You must be joking. UVA is a safety school for those in serious running for Ivies or top SLACs. Many of the kids who are accepted into those schools turn down UVA.
Well, my son will. He certainly has the stats, but there are other schools in the us that offer him more.
Please post back in a year after you've been through the mill.
Are you serious? At my kid's HS, UVA accepts 40-50 every year and only 20-25 go. UVA is a safety for plenty of kids.