Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Mine doesn’t go to UVA but he and his roommates have all said the job of the advisors at their school is to keep them in school for five or six years.
Also false because UVA has one of the highest four-year graduation rates at 94.3%
Maybe you missed the part where I wrote mine does NOT go to UVA. Not false at all.
Anonymous wrote:Mine doesn’t go to UVA but he and his roommates have all said the job of the advisors at their school is to keep them in school for five or six years.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Mine doesn’t go to UVA but he and his roommates have all said the job of the advisors at their school is to keep them in school for five or six years.
Also false because UVA has one of the highest four-year graduation rates at 94.3%
Anonymous wrote:Mine doesn’t go to UVA but he and his roommates have all said the job of the advisors at their school is to keep them in school for five or six years.
Anonymous wrote:3: I am making this up.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I was part of a volunteer tour guide group in college that was prestigious.
We had a meeting of alumni on zoom earlier this year because the current members were having issues with motivation and enthusiasm. They said that the pandemic made a lot of students feel less connected to their school and more apt to complain about normal speed bumps that come with college life.
We always thought we were superior to paid guides at other colleges. WE loved our school. They were just doing a job. But what happens when you have two years of virtual learning and aren't as enthusiastic about school?
yep everyone has bad days. I don't expect tour guides to be perfect. They are just kids after all. My kids tour guide at UVA was a third year who had just transferred in from Miami and while he didn't know alot, he was so enthusiastic about being there and the opportunity he had that it was infectious. That said, he didn't tell us much that we didn't already know.
Anonymous wrote:I was part of a volunteer tour guide group in college that was prestigious.
We had a meeting of alumni on zoom earlier this year because the current members were having issues with motivation and enthusiasm. They said that the pandemic made a lot of students feel less connected to their school and more apt to complain about normal speed bumps that come with college life.
We always thought we were superior to paid guides at other colleges. WE loved our school. They were just doing a job. But what happens when you have two years of virtual learning and aren't as enthusiastic about school?