Anonymous wrote:It’s cope for northeast kids
No one is turning down t20, uva, umd to go oos public unless they are an athlete or getting full ride
It’s different if you are from Minnesota and you go oos to wisco
Psu for example is full of Jersey and New York kids but these aren’t kids who got into even Cornell for that matter
Oos public is popular because they are backups
Anonymous wrote:It’s cope for northeast kids
No one is turning down t20, uva, umd to go oos public unless they are an athlete or getting full ride
It’s different if you are from Minnesota and you go oos to wisco
Psu for example is full of Jersey and New York kids but these aren’t kids who got into even Cornell for that matter
Oos public is popular because they are backups
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Not sure I would put UVA and UMD in same category. You are going to OOS public instead of in state UVA because you didn't get into UVA. Not many Michigan, UCLA and UNC admit cases. UMD, while a really good school and not that easy to get into instate -- it is not a highly ranked public, more middle of the road. So very likely the OOS is better and you may have even received some merit to make it comparable in price. Add in the allure of geographic diversity and some more interesting places to go to school than College Park and there is your answer. Still think UMD is great choice, great school but not the same declines as UVA......
or because you're not white or Asian and want a school with more diversity of black or Hispanic people.
Or because you simply didn’t want to go to UVA - something that is probably unfathomable to the PP.
Anonymous wrote:Usually the OOS publics are less expensive than privates
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:In VA, it's often because kids don't get into UVA and VT (or JMU), but they still want the big state flagship experience. So they apply to OOS flagships. These kids don't really want to go out of state, but they also do not want to go to VCU, GMU, or ODU.
Granted, UVA is very competitive but after that a lot of kids whose parents can afford other options prefer OOS schools to VT and JMU. For some, VT is too rural and has a quasi-military feel (with the campus layout and big Corps of Cadets) and JMU is seen as high school 2.0 with so many NoVa kids. So you are fooling yourself if you think the kids are only going out of state because they aren’t getting into VT or JMU.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The main reason, at least in the case of Virginia, is that the state didn’t grow their flagship school enough. UVA is too small of a flagship for a state with over 8.5 million people in it. It’s half the size of its peers and isn’t serving the people of Virginia nearly as well as it should.
But you forgot to add in William & Mary. No State public system has something like W&M
Anonymous wrote:In VA, it's often because kids don't get into UVA and VT (or JMU), but they still want the big state flagship experience. So they apply to OOS flagships. These kids don't really want to go out of state, but they also do not want to go to VCU, GMU, or ODU.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The main reason, at least in the case of Virginia, is that the state didn’t grow their flagship school enough. UVA is too small of a flagship for a state with over 8.5 million people in it. It’s half the size of its peers and isn’t serving the people of Virginia nearly as well as it should.
But you forgot to add in William & Mary. No State public system has something like W&M
Anonymous wrote:The main reason, at least in the case of Virginia, is that the state didn’t grow their flagship school enough. UVA is too small of a flagship for a state with over 8.5 million people in it. It’s half the size of its peers and isn’t serving the people of Virginia nearly as well as it should.