Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Washington & Lee much higher ranked and slightly lower cost
lol. Let it begin about W&L...
The school’s name, and its many historical connections to Confederate Gen. Robert E. Lee, have become increasingly divisive over the years. Last year, students and faculty voted in favor of changing the school’s name, urging university leaders to take steps to end the glorification of Lee. Alumni groups have formed on both sides of the issue, advocating for loyalty to the school’s long traditions and, alternatively, for a dramatic change to ensure that the campus is welcoming to all.
Over 4,000 options for higher education in the US, so if you don’t like the name or historical connotations then don’t apply it is that simple.
Never should have changed the name of Lee Chapel to University Chapel.
Anonymous wrote:Considered comparable to the elite new England privates, sp great rep in the northeast, not so much elsewhere. But considering the wasington-Boston corridor isnthe largest employment center in the country, that's probably good enough.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I lived here my whole life and never heard of U of Richmond until my DS was applying to college.
Lived and in suburban MD/worked in DC, 1990-1998. Heard of UVA, VT, W&M, JMU, GMU, and the Citadel. Also Hampton. After moving away, learned about W&L and Sweetbriar. My parents are Ivy grads. I am a multiple state flagship grad from Rust Belt
Only through DCUM in this past year have I heard of U. of Richmond.
Anonymous wrote:I lived here my whole life and never heard of U of Richmond until my DS was applying to college.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Washington & Lee much higher ranked and slightly lower cost
lol. Let it begin about W&L...
The school’s name, and its many historical connections to Confederate Gen. Robert E. Lee, have become increasingly divisive over the years. Last year, students and faculty voted in favor of changing the school’s name, urging university leaders to take steps to end the glorification of Lee. Alumni groups have formed on both sides of the issue, advocating for loyalty to the school’s long traditions and, alternatively, for a dramatic change to ensure that the campus is welcoming to all.
Anonymous wrote:Washington & Lee much higher ranked and slightly lower cost
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:DD, rising junior, is determined to go to a college with an urban campus. I'd love to fine a college that's as safe as an urban campus could be. Any ideas?
Georgetown. Boston university. Tufts sort of. Brown. Georgia tech. Northwestern. U of Minnesota.
Anonymous wrote:DD, rising junior, is determined to go to a college with an urban campus. I'd love to fine a college that's as safe as an urban campus could be. Any ideas?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I was surprised to find out that University of Richmond is about as difficult to get into as UVA or W&M. I'm a life long VA resident, and I've barely heard of the school. You would think a school that's so selective would have decent name recognition. Can anyone not originally from VA offer any insight as to how it's regarded?
I'm curious how you arrived at this conclusion. Do you have a cite? U of R is called only "moderately selective" whereas UVA and W&M are both "highly selective". Schev's report on GPAs has both UVA and W&M way ahead of UOR: weighted gpas at at UVA at the 75th percentile at a 4.51 and 4.53 for W&M. U0R's is only a weighted 3.95. UoR does not attract the same caliber of student as does W&M or UVA
Not the OP but you can simply google this
UVA acceptance rate - 18.7%
W&M acceptance rate - 33.5%
Richmond acceptance rate - 24.4%
not really comparable, closest is between UVA and Richmond
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I was surprised to find out that University of Richmond is about as difficult to get into as UVA or W&M. I'm a life long VA resident, and I've barely heard of the school. You would think a school that's so selective would have decent name recognition. Can anyone not originally from VA offer any insight as to how it's regarded?
I'm curious how you arrived at this conclusion. Do you have a cite? U of R is called only "moderately selective" whereas UVA and W&M are both "highly selective". Schev's report on GPAs has both UVA and W&M way ahead of UOR: weighted gpas at at UVA at the 75th percentile at a 4.51 and 4.53 for W&M. U0R's is only a weighted 3.95. UoR does not attract the same caliber of student as does W&M or UVA
Not the OP but you can simply google this
UVA acceptance rate - 18.7%
W&M acceptance rate - 33.5%
Richmond acceptance rate - 24.4%
not really comparable, closest is between UVA and Richmond
No one compares the selectivity figures of publics against privates. you can't. It's apples and oranges.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I was surprised to find out that University of Richmond is about as difficult to get into as UVA or W&M. I'm a life long VA resident, and I've barely heard of the school. You would think a school that's so selective would have decent name recognition. Can anyone not originally from VA offer any insight as to how it's regarded?
I'm curious how you arrived at this conclusion. Do you have a cite? U of R is called only "moderately selective" whereas UVA and W&M are both "highly selective". Schev's report on GPAs has both UVA and W&M way ahead of UOR: weighted gpas at at UVA at the 75th percentile at a 4.51 and 4.53 for W&M. U0R's is only a weighted 3.95. UoR does not attract the same caliber of student as does W&M or UVA
Not the OP but you can simply google this
UVA acceptance rate - 18.7%
W&M acceptance rate - 33.5%
Richmond acceptance rate - 24.4%
not really comparable, closest is between UVA and Richmond