Anonymous wrote:It's important to think about how Radford ended up as your DS's only option for college. Is he just not that into school? Does he try and still struggle academically? Is he happy with average grades?
I know people who went to Radford because it was a good fit, and their lives are just fine now. I also know kids who just weren't academically inclined, and they didn't last long at Radford. People who say college is what you make of it are right -- but if college is going to be four more years of a miserable slog through classes your kid doesn't enjoy with no particular goal in mind, maybe a year off to figure things out (and work at the sort of job a high-school graduate can get) would be better.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Proud RU graduate, class of 1994. Female, by the way.
I was much like your DS, rejected from JMU and Tech. RU was my safe school and I packed up and started my freshman year with the idea that I'd transfer to JMU ASAP.
Guess what? I got very involved with student government, my residence hall and intramurals. I fell in love with the beautiful campus, the friendly students and also became a student ambassador and tour guide.
Have you gone on a tour? Has DS? You must. The campus is walkable, small and lovely - new academic buildings and updated residence halls in harmony with gorgeous, stately buildings.
Likely due to my experiences at RU, I had the self-confidence, drive and yes, solid academic skills that garnered me a solid job offer *before* graduation.
Don't discount RU. I am tremendously proud of my undergraduate degree in English.
RU is a place where underachievers can mature and thrive in a supportive, smaller college community. I was a far better, more serious college student than I was a high school student.
I've stayed involved in RU recruiting and admissions and have been back to campus often.
RU has excellent humanities, communication and speech disorders, teaching, nursing and business departments.
A word of caution: RU might be a "safe" school with generous admissions standards, but once accepted, it's tough for some to stay out of academic probation and even honor code violations. In my day, freshman were tripled in dorms in August but promised that by Fall Break that this would not be the case. And, it was! Tremendous attrition.
Great post.
Anonymous wrote:People have got to stop ranking the VA schools from best to worst. I'm glad the Radford alum PP sounded in in defense of a school that sounds like a great fit for kids whose HS records aren't pristine. While I haven't toured the campus I did drive through it and I thought it was lovely. Looks like a nice environment for learning.
Anonymous wrote:Proud RU graduate, class of 1994. Female, by the way.
I was much like your DS, rejected from JMU and Tech. RU was my safe school and I packed up and started my freshman year with the idea that I'd transfer to JMU ASAP.
Guess what? I got very involved with student government, my residence hall and intramurals. I fell in love with the beautiful campus, the friendly students and also became a student ambassador and tour guide.
Have you gone on a tour? Has DS? You must. The campus is walkable, small and lovely - new academic buildings and updated residence halls in harmony with gorgeous, stately buildings.
Likely due to my experiences at RU, I had the self-confidence, drive and yes, solid academic skills that garnered me a solid job offer *before* graduation.
Don't discount RU. I am tremendously proud of my undergraduate degree in English.
RU is a place where underachievers can mature and thrive in a supportive, smaller college community. I was a far better, more serious college student than I was a high school student.
I've stayed involved in RU recruiting and admissions and have been back to campus often.
RU has excellent humanities, communication and speech disorders, teaching, nursing and business departments.
A word of caution: RU might be a "safe" school with generous admissions standards, but once accepted, it's tough for some to stay out of academic probation and even honor code violations. In my day, freshman were tripled in dorms in August but promised that by Fall Break that this would not be the case. And, it was! Tremendous attrition.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Of course not going to college is worse than a degree from Radford. Radford has wonderful teaching and nursing programs.
Op here- that's nice, but DS isn't going to be nurse or teacher. We don't want to at for what we are concerned is in fact a scarlet letter, a badge of underachievement.
I'm the same age you are and I really don't have the same kind of view as Radford. I know it's not a "name" school, but I wouldn't regard it as a scarlet letter.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Of course not going to college is worse than a degree from Radford. Radford has wonderful teaching and nursing programs.
Op here- that's nice, but DS isn't going to be nurse or teacher. We don't want to at for what we are concerned is in fact a scarlet letter, a badge of underachievement.
Anonymous wrote:DS was admitted to Radford. Waitlisted at ODU. And rejections from JMU, VCU, etc. We are thinking that not attending college is better than a degree from Radford, but maybe its reputation has improved since we went to college 30 years ago. Thoughts?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If there is an exception to the notion that any diploma is better than none at all, Radford would be it.
No. Liberty. You must have confused the two.
Now, back when I was in College, we would do the Radford run (from Tech) to pick up girls from Radford. So there is that.
Anonymous wrote:If there is an exception to the notion that any diploma is better than none at all, Radford would be it.