Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This is a ridiculous thread. Mason is far from the ugliest and why should anyone pick college based solely based on beauty anyway?
Most Virginia colleges have something that could be significantly improved. JMU has an Interstate and railroad track running through it. VCU has some great older re-purposed but a lack of open space and bad newer buildings. ODU is kind of nondescript. UVA kind of loses the thread as you move away from the Lawn. VT has good and bad. Pretty much anything that was put up on Virginia campuses from 1955-1980 was architecturally questionable. Why single out GMU?
Would’ve been better just to let this thread die. But since you did...VT and UVA are gorgeous. You’re nitpicking. Mason is blah.
Anonymous wrote:This is a ridiculous thread. Mason is far from the ugliest and why should anyone pick college based solely based on beauty anyway?
Most Virginia colleges have something that could be significantly improved. JMU has an Interstate and railroad track running through it. VCU has some great older re-purposed but a lack of open space and bad newer buildings. ODU is kind of nondescript. UVA kind of loses the thread as you move away from the Lawn. VT has good and bad. Pretty much anything that was put up on Virginia campuses from 1955-1980 was architecturally questionable. Why single out GMU?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:There’s something for everyone. My DS has not liked any of the colleges we have toured with our DD who is a junior. He does not like any old buildings. While he does not want to go to Mason because it is “too close to home” it was the only campus he liked (went to UVA, W&M, JMU, VT, and Elon, in addition to UMD, Notre Dame, and Northwestern). I love the beauty of old college campuses, but understand his point, as I would love to live in a non-cookie cutter house, but only if it was updated. Will be interesting to see where he ends up as he has a perfect GPA so far as a sophomore and scored 1400+ on his PSAT.
Agreed, but jeez, what a limiting way to select a college. Many (most?) old campuses have lots of fantastic new spaces and hardly any have no old buildings. And most excellent schools - and your son is obviously an excellent student who will have opportunities at lots of great schools - are old. His views will probably evolve. The “too much brick”/“the doors are too heavy” absurdity usually evaporates.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:There’s something for everyone. My DS has not liked any of the colleges we have toured with our DD who is a junior. He does not like any old buildings. While he does not want to go to Mason because it is “too close to home” it was the only campus he liked (went to UVA, W&M, JMU, VT, and Elon, in addition to UMD, Notre Dame, and Northwestern). I love the beauty of old college campuses, but understand his point, as I would love to live in a non-cookie cutter house, but only if it was updated. Will be interesting to see where he ends up as he has a perfect GPA so far as a sophomore and scored 1400+ on his PSAT.
Agreed, but jeez, what a limiting way to select a college. Many (most?) old campuses have lots of fantastic new spaces and hardly any have no old buildings. And most excellent schools - and your son is obviously an excellent student who will have opportunities at lots of great schools - are old. His views will probably evolve. The “too much brick”/“the doors are too heavy” absurdity usually evaporates.
Anonymous wrote:There’s something for everyone. My DS has not liked any of the colleges we have toured with our DD who is a junior. He does not like any old buildings. While he does not want to go to Mason because it is “too close to home” it was the only campus he liked (went to UVA, W&M, JMU, VT, and Elon, in addition to UMD, Notre Dame, and Northwestern). I love the beauty of old college campuses, but understand his point, as I would love to live in a non-cookie cutter house, but only if it was updated. Will be interesting to see where he ends up as he has a perfect GPA so far as a sophomore and scored 1400+ on his PSAT.
Anonymous wrote:Perhaps, but it’s still ugly.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What a weird thread. GMU is certainly not a traditionally beautiful campus, but it's hardly ugly. Are you just intentionally wanting to talk smack about GMU?
Folks, we have a winner. Yes, the OP is just the usual GMU hater. Nothing new to see here. And I agree, GMU is far from ugly. It's actually quite nice looking, IMO.
OP was confused and was talking about the new Prince William Science and Tech. campus. 18 pages of drivel and she doesn't even know what campus she was on or near.
Gotta take you to some nice campuses.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What a weird thread. GMU is certainly not a traditionally beautiful campus, but it's hardly ugly. Are you just intentionally wanting to talk smack about GMU?
Folks, we have a winner. Yes, the OP is just the usual GMU hater. Nothing new to see here. And I agree, GMU is far from ugly. It's actually quite nice looking, IMO.
OP was confused and was talking about the new Prince William Science and Tech. campus. 18 pages of drivel and she doesn't even know what campus she was on or near.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Why is GMU’s graduation rate only 67%?
Yikes. That’s atrocious.
I dunno--I think lowish graduation rates can be a good thing. It tells you a school is not a diploma mill, not just handing out degrees for showing up (or sometimes showing up).
GMU's rate is actually 69.2% for the most recent cohort (kids who started in 2012--they do it by 6 year rates) which is the average for VA schools. But it's the largest VA public and an R1 university. It has a large traditional entering freshman student cohorts--what is reflected in this data, but also even more transfer students, non-traditional age students and graduate students. GMU accepts a wide range of students from diverse socioeconomic backgrounds --but it's also a rigorous, major research institution. If all those students were able to graduate I'd worry that it was rubber stamping degrees. There are many states that have public colleges that essentially do that--sometimes even the flagship.
Christopher Newport strikes me as interesting here -it's devoted to undergraduates and much smaller in scale. Just 10 years earlier it used to have graduation rates lower than GMUs --58% (which is somewhat damning since it ONLY serves undergrads and a much smaller population ) but it has really been growing them over the years in this regard so it's latest number is 76%--not as high as the highest (Washington & Lee at 94%, UVA at 93%) but edging in on JMU and VT who are at 81%. An interesting number also is College of William & Mary at 88.6%. I wonder if it's telling of W&M of being significantly harder than UVA--they attract similarly qualified students but have a lower graduation rate.
http://research.schev.edu/gradrates/grs10.asp
So then you’re worried about the rise in graduation rates as that indicates more rubber-stamping? Don’t twist yourself in a knot defending the crappy grad rate. It’s not a good thing.
No, I'm actually just unsure about the use of graduation rates as a great measure of school quality--especially when entering populations vary so much. I don't have a stake in the game re GMU--no one in my family is going/went there --I'm just vaguely interested in how we measure the quality of institutions. I worry that schools concerned about rankings/accountability measures that focus on grad rates will pressure rubber stamping--high stakes measures do tend to distort.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What a weird thread. GMU is certainly not a traditionally beautiful campus, but it's hardly ugly. Are you just intentionally wanting to talk smack about GMU?
Folks, we have a winner. Yes, the OP is just the usual GMU hater. Nothing new to see here. And I agree, GMU is far from ugly. It's actually quite nice looking, IMO.