Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I hear that UVA culture is hyper competitive. Not an academic stress culture like W&M but cutthroat socially. Is this true?
William and Mary= proper liberal arts college
UVA= labor-power state university. Despite its size, it’s only good as subjects which allow one to sell their labor-power: law and business.
Anonymous wrote:People ask what the culture is like at UVA. Everything I understand from what I experienced in the 90s is that it hasn’t changed that much, to be honest.
It’s preppy, fratty, hard drinking, hard partying, competitive academically. Great reputation, although seen as a bit snobby.
Yes it is more diverse now, harder to get into too. Yes, that drinking and frat culture can be found at plenty of other schools. But it all still stands. Yes you can skip all of that and focus on your other activities or things to do, but you asked what the culture is like and I don’t want to sugarcoat it.
Anonymous wrote:I hear that UVA culture is hyper competitive. Not an academic stress culture like W&M but cutthroat socially. Is this true?
Anonymous wrote:Two of our daughters went to UVA from NOVA. Both were in sororities. They are smart, pretty, outgoing, and come from money. They made good friends at UVA but are generally better friends with their high school friends. Neither did much dating in college because they both thought the guys were generally douchebags. They both married someone unconnected to UVA and both now have good jobs of the type that “give back.” They’re not big fans of corporate America.
If you’d ask them, they’d agree that certain types do better at UVA than others and they’d acknowledge that - at least on the surface - they fit the type while they were there. Neither has any regrets for having attended, but neither has any great love for the school either. They are both practical, and it was a practical decision for both.
. This is an idiotic response. I’m sorry. Anonymous wrote:Two of our daughters went to UVA from NOVA. Both were in sororities. They are smart, pretty, outgoing, and come from money. They made good friends at UVA but are generally better friends with their high school friends. Neither did much dating in college because they both thought the guys were generally douchebags. They both married someone unconnected to UVA and both now have good jobs of the type that “give back.” They’re not big fans of corporate America.
If you’d ask them, they’d agree that certain types do better at UVA than others and they’d acknowledge that - at least on the surface - they fit the type while they were there. Neither has any regrets for having attended, but neither has any great love for the school either. They are both practical, and it was a practical decision for both.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:UVA is rapey af.
UVA's sexual assault survey/questionnaire had 25% of girls saying they'd been raped or that they'd been incapacitated and assaulted or threatened with rape (not sure what the wording was exactly) and W&M's survey had the percent of women who experienced rape/sexual assault at 4% for women. Both pre-covid so maybe data different now.
Anonymous wrote:Never stepped foot in a frat house.
Don’t assume a willingness to report sexual assault is a bad thing. 1 in 4 is a national stat. If some school has a dramatically lower number, that’s not saying it’s not happening. It’s saying it’s not being reported.
But I thought no on from NOVA gets in?Anonymous wrote:All the kids you didn't like in NOVA HS, all in one place, with a few kids of expats coming in from other parts of the US.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:All the kids you didn't like in NOVA HS, all in one place, with a few kids of expats coming in from other parts of the US.
why, because they are the grinders, hyper competitive ones? What is meant by this?