Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:In-state if not one that is highly competitive.
If tuition is not an issue, there are a lot more options with ED T30-T60 schools. Try to get a good test score.
For straight B students? Nope.
From schools 76 to 4,000? Better chances.
Anonymous wrote:I know everyone here has kids with unweighted 4.0s but where do the smart but non-4.0 kids go? The ones with ECs that are good but not great (rec sports their whole life but no travel), good ECs but not great (volunteer at org their whole life but ever started one), etc? Kid is a rising soph so we're not fully in this world yet.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:An unweighted "B" from where?
Very different to get B's from large, average HS school (private or public) where more than have the class has a 4.0 avg. And B's really mean C's.
But if your student is getting B's from Philips Andover and taking very rigorous courses and doesn't weight GPA or give out As easily despite only admitting top students.
Um, what? Bs mean Bs.![]()
Anonymous wrote:Quality LAC’s that many top students overlook- Ohio Wesleyan, Earlham, Wofford, Rhodes, Wooster, Centre, Hendrix, and the list goes on…
Anonymous wrote:An unweighted "B" from where?
Very different to get B's from large, average HS school (private or public) where more than have the class has a 4.0 avg. And B's really mean C's.
But if your student is getting B's from Philips Andover and taking very rigorous courses and doesn't weight GPA or give out As easily despite only admitting top students.
Anonymous wrote:Jesuit colleges and universities that aren’t Georgetown or BC. Excellent and practical educations that lead to great careers after a fun four years.
Anonymous wrote:Can anyone speak to the merits of Longwood and CNU?
My B/B+ student is interested in them but doesn't want to miss out on the classic college experience!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:There are thousands of colleges. What state are you in?
Virginia.
ODU
Radford
Longwood
VCU
Mary Washington
George Mason
CNU
VCU is a real and interesting school with reasonable admissions standards, yes. The rest of those schools bite.
Your knot very articulate PP.
This B student graduated from Radford! Forever grateful and still an active alumni recruiter and donor.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If you’re on FB, there’s a group called something like: College Admissions for Awesomely Average Kids. The group is specifically for kids with under 3.5 weighted GPAs & 1100ish (or less) SAT scores.
Lots of good info on colleges that readily accept kids with these stats. You can search the page for your kid’s GPA to find “results” posts from previous cycles (note: for some schools, like JMU, they admit OOS kids with way lower GPAs than NoVA kids. So shoot your shot, just something to be aware of)
Any citation for this?
Anonymous wrote:Can anyone speak to the merits of Longwood and CNU?
My B/B+ student is interested in them but doesn't want to miss out on the classic college experience!
Anonymous wrote:If you’re on FB, there’s a group called something like: College Admissions for Awesomely Average Kids. The group is specifically for kids with under 3.5 weighted GPAs & 1100ish (or less) SAT scores.
Lots of good info on colleges that readily accept kids with these stats. You can search the page for your kid’s GPA to find “results” posts from previous cycles (note: for some schools, like JMU, they admit OOS kids with way lower GPAs than NoVA kids. So shoot your shot, just something to be aware of)
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:There are thousands of colleges. What state are you in?
Virginia.
ODU
Radford
Longwood
VCU
Mary Washington
George Mason
CNU
DP- this is a tough pill to swallow because these were safety schools with a B average in the 90/00s. For many parents, it’s hard to wrap our heads around this.
Grade inflation. B in the 90s is an A now.
If your kid went to public school, yes.
I love this. The suggestion that there has been no grade inflation in private schools is ridiculous. There’s not a private school in the DMV where the average GPA isn’t a solid B or better.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My kid is an A student (uw 4.0) and top choice is currently Mary Wash. It’s a great small school. Size is right for DC, they have strong programs in areas of interest, DC has spent time on the campus for a summer program and loved the grounds and facilities, has talked to several professors and really liked them. The price is great at DC’s stats would get automatic merit aid. Just because B students can also get into doesn’t make it a bad school.
FWIW, second choice is currently U of Richmond but we can’t afford it without a hefty chunk of aid, and UR isn’t known as being super generous.
I’ve been pushing W&M, which DC has the stats to be a target, but they don’t like it nearly as much as the other two.
It’s great that VA has so many public and private options.
Mary Washington is an amazing school that doesn’t get much love on this site. I’m an alum and proud of it. I went on to grad school at a more prestigious university, but Mary Washington was a much better experience.
Anonymous wrote:My kid is an A student (uw 4.0) and top choice is currently Mary Wash. It’s a great small school. Size is right for DC, they have strong programs in areas of interest, DC has spent time on the campus for a summer program and loved the grounds and facilities, has talked to several professors and really liked them. The price is great at DC’s stats would get automatic merit aid. Just because B students can also get into doesn’t make it a bad school.
FWIW, second choice is currently U of Richmond but we can’t afford it without a hefty chunk of aid, and UR isn’t known as being super generous.
I’ve been pushing W&M, which DC has the stats to be a target, but they don’t like it nearly as much as the other two.
It’s great that VA has so many public and private options.