Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I’ve been looking into Rose-Hulman Institute of Technology, which has a 75% acceptance rate and is ranked #1 for undergraduate engineering programs. I’m confused why Virginia Tech, which has a much lower acceptance rate, isn’t ranked as high. What is Rose-Hulman doing differently? Shouldn’t Virginia Tech, being a state school, be more accessible to Virginia residents who want to study engineering or computers?
It seems crazy that Virginia Tech is so competitive while Rose-Hulman is more open, especially considering their top ranking. I’ve heard Rose-Hulman also offers excellent financial aid, which can bring costs down to in-state tuition levels. It might be worth looking into for my kid instead of Tech.
https://www.usnews.com/best-colleges/rosehulman-institute-of-technology-1830/overall-rankings
Does anyone else have thoughts on this? Should Virginia Tech reconsider their admissions process to better serve Virginia residents interested in STEM fields?
Terre Haute, IN is a real tough sell. Plus it's only number one for schools that do not award doctorates. Research matters.
For engineering? No not really at all
Anonymous wrote:It's a "self selecting" amazing college. Pretty easy answer.
Anonymous wrote:Because Rose-Hulman is self selecting. Applicants know that if they can get into Rose-Hulman they can get in almost anywhere. So the kids that aren’t super qualified don’t even bother applying.
Remember the type of student that goes to Rose-Hulman is a highly logical person not someone who thinks I will study engineering because of a strong job market.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Few outside the Mid-Atlantic really know about it.
Are you sure about that? I've met Ivy grads from outside the area that thought GMU was a academically stronger school than VA Tech. UVA and VA Tech are seen as glorified State Schools to the people in Cali - they look it as we see Texas A&M. Probably a good school but nothing impressive.
Stop your GMU bashing - its an under rated school. mainly because it lacks a nationally ranked football team.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Because acceptance rates are a function of how desirable a school is, not how good it is. Those are not the same thing. Many, many people would prefer Blacksburg and its environment and football games etc to Terre Haute and a college that’s 70%+ male.
Yes. Why would think you think the acceptance rate conveys anything about quality, OP?
Acceptance rate can be easily manipulated.
No, the desirability of a product is measured by its demand. More students want a VaTech degree. It is more valuable to the marketplace.
By the same toke, UVA's admission rate is 19%. George Mason's admission rate is 90%. Are you telling me these admission rate doesn't inform the public about the quality of the respective schools??
No one is saying selectivity is irrelevant; just that by itself it does not tell you much about the quality of the school. UVA is more desirable for a lot of reasons that have nothing to do with what you actually learn there or the quality of the student cohort. GMU was (and some still perceive as) a commuter college. It’s loaded with Koch money and the strings that come attached to that. It has a bland campus. Few outside the Mid-Atlantic really know about it. It’s not a major conference for sports. It’s not scenic.
People evaluate a lot of non academic factors in applying.
Perceived name brand
Location
Weather
Gender and ethnic and religious proportions
Greek influence
Housing availability
Access to internships
Lol gmu and koch money? Have you seen the professors and student body it's the most diverse in the nation top 10 actually https://www.gmu.edu/news/2022-09/mason-now-top-10-public-university-diversity-innovation-and-cybersecurity-education-us#:~:text=George%20Mason%20University%20is%20among,Colleges%20List%E2%80%9D%20rankings%20released%20Monday.
Anonymous wrote:Few outside the Mid-Atlantic really know about it.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Because acceptance rates are a function of how desirable a school is, not how good it is. Those are not the same thing. Many, many people would prefer Blacksburg and its environment and football games etc to Terre Haute and a college that’s 70%+ male.
Yes. Why would think you think the acceptance rate conveys anything about quality, OP?
Acceptance rate can be easily manipulated.
No, the desirability of a product is measured by its demand. More students want a VaTech degree. It is more valuable to the marketplace.
By the same toke, UVA's admission rate is 19%. George Mason's admission rate is 90%. Are you telling me these admission rate doesn't inform the public about the quality of the respective schools??
No one is saying selectivity is irrelevant; just that by itself it does not tell you much about the quality of the school. UVA is more desirable for a lot of reasons that have nothing to do with what you actually learn there or the quality of the student cohort. GMU was (and some still perceive as) a commuter college. It’s loaded with Koch money and the strings that come attached to that. It has a bland campus. Few outside the Mid-Atlantic really know about it. It’s not a major conference for sports. It’s not scenic.
People evaluate a lot of non academic factors in applying.
Perceived name brand
Location
Weather
Gender and ethnic and religious proportions
Greek influence
Housing availability
Access to internships