Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My own kids think the DMV is lame.
Don't all kids think where they grew up is lame? It's because they live with their boring parents there. Time eternally true.
And if you think DMV is lame, why on earth would you think that Columbia, SC, Tuscaloosa, AL, State College, PA,r Columbus, OH, etc. are more exciting? Even cute college towns like Bloomington, IN can get old quick.
When did you last visit Columbia, Tuscaloosa, State College, Columbus?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My own kids think the DMV is lame.
Don't all kids think where they grew up is lame? It's because they live with their boring parents there. Time eternally true.
And if you think DMV is lame, why on earth would you think that Columbia, SC, Tuscaloosa, AL, State College, PA,r Columbus, OH, etc. are more exciting? Even cute college towns like Bloomington, IN can get old quick.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I have a kid who got into uva/W&m/va tech. Ended up at Indiana. I would say in the 4 years, probably had very few if any classes where they didn’t know someone from the dmv. Once they got to Kelley it was usually multiple dmv kids in their class. Upon graduation most of his friends ended up in Chicago, NYC, Boston, Indianapolis and San Francisco., and this includes some of the dmv kids. Not sure what the poster hang up is on uva and being worldly. In Kelley, barring COVID times, you need a passport cause they are required classes that have international travel in them. They take a 12 credit semester class where the school chooses the teams and each team has a west coast kid, east coast kid, Indiana kid, international kid. Some of us parents have only role in the entire college process. And that is to write the check.
Your kid probably made a smart choice to go to Kelly because it’s a direct admit to the business school. UVA’s commerce school is obviously better but not direct admit so your kid would be taking a risk.
US News ranks Indiana and UVA’s undergraduate business programs equally. Both are #8.
UVA’s commerce school ranks behind only Wharton according to Poets and Quants, a more respected source.
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And last April the Wall Street Journal named UVA as no 1 public in the nation for high paying jobs in finance
Where all the kids are being layed off. Ask me how I know?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My own kids think the DMV is lame.
Don't all kids think where they grew up is lame? It's because they live with their boring parents there. Time eternally true.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My own kids think the DMV is lame.
Don't all kids think where they grew up is lame? It's because they live with their boring parents there. Time eternally true.
Anonymous wrote:My own kids think the DMV is lame.
Anonymous wrote:My own kids think the DMV is lame.
Anonymous wrote:I think there are three reasons OOS flagship schools are presently popular.
1) Kids want to leave the DMV, which is fairly boring, and experience a different corner of the country. Totally normal.
2) For kids with good stats, you can get some very good merit at public universities throughout the rest of the country. It's often cheaper to go the University of South Carolina or Indiana University than it is to go your instate options, particularly UVA and UMD, where it's difficult to get merit scholarships.
3) Schooling in the DMV has been depressing for the past 5 years. The long, long school closures during Covid. Virtual classes. The overkill with DEI lectures and assemblies every day. Micro-aggressions. Trans issues. It goes on and on and at a certain point kids are just rolling their eyes and want to get on with life. Students want to have a normal, traditional college experience. And they feel they are more likely to find it elsewhere.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I have a kid who got into uva/W&m/va tech. Ended up at Indiana. I would say in the 4 years, probably had very few if any classes where they didn’t know someone from the dmv. Once they got to Kelley it was usually multiple dmv kids in their class. Upon graduation most of his friends ended up in Chicago, NYC, Boston, Indianapolis and San Francisco., and this includes some of the dmv kids. Not sure what the poster hang up is on uva and being worldly. In Kelley, barring COVID times, you need a passport cause they are required classes that have international travel in them. They take a 12 credit semester class where the school chooses the teams and each team has a west coast kid, east coast kid, Indiana kid, international kid. Some of us parents have only role in the entire college process. And that is to write the check.
Your kid probably made a smart choice to go to Kelly because it’s a direct admit to the business school. UVA’s commerce school is obviously better but not direct admit so your kid would be taking a risk.
US News ranks Indiana and UVA’s undergraduate business programs equally. Both are #8.
UVA’s commerce school ranks behind only Wharton according to Poets and Quants, a more respected source.
![]()
And last April the Wall Street Journal named UVA as no 1 public in the nation for high paying jobs in finance
Where all the kids are being layed off. Ask me how I know?
Anonymous wrote:I can’t decide who on this thread is more obnoxious—the elitist UVA booster or annoying UMD guy. It’s a very close call.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:“You're looking for ways to justify your own insecurities.“
No, you’re looking for ways to justify a lack a lack of curiosity and a fear of adventure.
The vanity of people here who assume you have to be crazy or stupid to want to experience a public university that isn’t in College Park or Charlottesville reminds me of those New Yorkers who think everybody in the world spends all day trying to figure out how they might possibly be lucky enough to someday live in NYC. Get over yourselves. College isn’t one size fits all.
Lol. I’m the poster who had two UVA grads, one who joined the Peace Corp for three years and other who lived abroad for 7 years after college and got a masters in a European university. Both also studied abroad in college. Does that sound like a “lack of curiosity and fear of adventure” to you? Get back to me after your spawn do that after going to Ohio State.
You may not realize it, but you are a deplorable, disgusting human being.
Ha ha ok. Sorry that my kids are more accomplished than yours.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:“You're looking for ways to justify your own insecurities.“
No, you’re looking for ways to justify a lack a lack of curiosity and a fear of adventure.
The vanity of people here who assume you have to be crazy or stupid to want to experience a public university that isn’t in College Park or Charlottesville reminds me of those New Yorkers who think everybody in the world spends all day trying to figure out how they might possibly be lucky enough to someday live in NYC. Get over yourselves. College isn’t one size fits all.
Lol. I’m the poster who had two UVA grads, one who joined the Peace Corp for three years and other who lived abroad for 7 years after college and got a masters in a European university. Both also studied abroad in college. Does that sound like a “lack of curiosity and fear of adventure” to you? Get back to me after your spawn do that after going to Ohio State.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I have a kid who got into uva/W&m/va tech. Ended up at Indiana. I would say in the 4 years, probably had very few if any classes where they didn’t know someone from the dmv. Once they got to Kelley it was usually multiple dmv kids in their class. Upon graduation most of his friends ended up in Chicago, NYC, Boston, Indianapolis and San Francisco., and this includes some of the dmv kids. Not sure what the poster hang up is on uva and being worldly. In Kelley, barring COVID times, you need a passport cause they are required classes that have international travel in them. They take a 12 credit semester class where the school chooses the teams and each team has a west coast kid, east coast kid, Indiana kid, international kid. Some of us parents have only role in the entire college process. And that is to write the check.
Your kid probably made a smart choice to go to Kelly because it’s a direct admit to the business school. UVA’s commerce school is obviously better but not direct admit so your kid would be taking a risk.
US News ranks Indiana and UVA’s undergraduate business programs equally. Both are #8.
UVA’s commerce school ranks behind only Wharton according to Poets and Quants, a more respected source.
![]()
And last April the Wall Street Journal named UVA as no 1 public in the nation for high paying jobs in finance