Imploding your kid's entire college network, experience, social life, dating pool and competitiveness to "save" a few grand. Talking about penny wise, pound foolish
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP here: She is committed for the freshman year. We are looking to change course after her freshman year and/or encourage our other kids differently.
Um no, just apply to transfer in the spring, I know three people who transferred into UVA after getting denied initially. Just tell her to get good grades and transfer.
Yes, that's an option, but she would still save more money by spending a year at NOVA community college. I don't know anyone who has done it, but it seems reasonable.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:"We are seriously considering the "guaranteed admission" program at Northern Virginia Community college where, if you maintain a 3.4 (or 3.6) for the first 2 years at community college and then transfer to UVA (or William and Mary). "
Is this really a thing???
The community college transfer option is “a thing” but it’s not as easy as it sounds or everyone would be doing it. You
Must meet HOA requirements in core courses. Read comment 8:07 on p 2
Yeah, if OP and family want to explore this option, I suggest meeting with someone at the CC. In my state the guaranteed admission route is very regimented. So you need a certain number of credits and a certain GPA and you can't have more than a certain number of credits. I'm not sure how that would work with a double transfer. You need expert advice!
Anonymous wrote:I know some people that have done really well by going to NVCC and transferring to UVA (one went to Harvard Medical school) and others that spent years at community college before finishing requirement to transfer. If your kid is organized and committed to transferring, the guaranteed admissions is pretty straight forward. NVCC has advisors who guide students on specific classes to take since transferring is common and expected. Also, UVA/William and Mary have detailed lists of classes that are accepted and credits given for these classes.
Make sure your kid knows both the requirements for getting an associated degree from community college and the major/graduation requirements at the desired 4 year college. For example, UVA Arts and Sciences school requires 2 writing classes and 4 semesters of a foreign language (or a placement test score for that level). You can transfer without these classes, but it is tough as a junior transfer to squeeze in required intro classes while also taking major requirements.
My sibling spent 4 years (including summers) at NVCC to get a two year degree. He was slowed down by changing majors, required classes being full, dropping classes to maintain his GPA, and having to take a high-school level foundation class math class (even though he had taken calculus in high school) that did not count toward his degree and prevented him from taking a math and science sequence for a year.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:"We are seriously considering the "guaranteed admission" program at Northern Virginia Community college where, if you maintain a 3.4 (or 3.6) for the first 2 years at community college and then transfer to UVA (or William and Mary). "
Is this really a thing???
The community college transfer option is “a thing” but it’s not as easy as it sounds or everyone would be doing it. You
Must meet HOA requirements in core courses. Read comment 8:07 on p 2
Anonymous wrote:"We are seriously considering the "guaranteed admission" program at Northern Virginia Community college where, if you maintain a 3.4 (or 3.6) for the first 2 years at community college and then transfer to UVA (or William and Mary). "
Is this really a thing???
Anonymous wrote:OP here: I want to sincerely thank those who took the time to share your experiences and insights. I've learned a lot of helpful information and gained some valuable insights from you (and please continue to share if you have other experiences with the CC to UVA or W&M route). To those who felt the need to demonize, diagnose, or insult me because I didn't know (or hadn't thought through) some things and came here to learn ...I only hope that you can find some inner peace and love for yourself that might help with your need to throw hate onto others. Life is short and there is already so much negativity in the world, why spend any time adding to it and intentionally insulting others?
Anonymous wrote:My daughter is smart, did well, and got into a few good out of state state schools and private schools, but she didn't get into UVA or William and Mary. (She's in the top 15% of her class, but not the top 10% which, at her high school seemed necessary to get in - too many northern Virginia kids applying for the same schools we are told.) She has committed to an out of state school, but we are having heart palpitations about the cost (we saved for $120k/kid for college and can now see that it was not nearly enough...please no snarky judgy comments. We are both on non-profit salaries and felt pretty darn good about having saved as much as we did). We are trying to figure out how to make all 4 years work without her going into too much debt (and have two other kids on the way to college in the next few years). We are seriously considering the "guaranteed admission" program at Northern Virginia Community college where, if you maintain a 3.4 (or 3.6) for the first 2 years at community college and then transfer to UVA (or William and Mary). Has anyone had experience/have wisdom on doing that? Did it ruin your kid's college experience or did it work out quite well? Would love to hear any opinions on that strategy or warnings. (FYI - NoVA is $5,000 per year to attend...one would save a huge amount of money to do that for 2 years and still be able to get a solid BA from UVA!)
Anonymous wrote:As none of the high achievers go to community college, its just not the intellectual or social environment i would want for my child. Its like putting them in class with bottom 25% of high school graduates, doesn't make sense to me.