Anonymous wrote:Look into reciprocity. No doubt your kid will be majoring in something obscure and crunchy that Virginia state schools don't offer but Maryland state schools do. You can thus get in-state tuition. Basket weaving comes to mind.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Don't kid yourself. This stuff happens on every college campus. At least that story made UVA address it.Where there's smoke...
My Christian university sweeps these issues under the rug so fast it would make your head spin. If you ask the administration, rape doesn't happen there, but we all know it does.
What is a Christian university?
Anonymous wrote:Don't kid yourself. This stuff happens on every college campus. At least that story made UVA address it.Where there's smoke...
My Christian university sweeps these issues under the rug so fast it would make your head spin. If you ask the administration, rape doesn't happen there, but we all know it does.
Don't kid yourself. This stuff happens on every college campus. At least that story made UVA address it.Where there's smoke...
Anonymous wrote:Honestly, I think VA has great options for state schools. There is are liberal arts options ranging from W&M to UVA-Wise. There is a teachers college like Longwood. Big state school experiences like JMU or Tech. Urban schools like ODU or even UMW. That's one thing I really like about VA, so many unis. to choose from. You will find all kinds of people at these schools.
Anonymous wrote:
I went two years to a SLAC and two years to a big university. I encouraged my son to go to a SLAC.
+1 with the caveat...the SLAC is for a certain DC. If they are bit more on the quite type and less into living in a big pond.. SLAC I the way to go. Smaller classes; relationships with professors (who later write recommendations for your graduate school etc.)._
One of the reasons I'm a fan of larger universities (instead of SLAC) is that it's possible to find the group of people that share your views and interests, while also simultaneously gaining an understanding of the many different types of people and opinions that are out in the larger world.
I say this as a liberal arts major. I just think that larger universities are a better dress rehearsal for the "real world" than a SLAC.
Anonymous wrote:If you look at voting records, there are blue circles that surround the three Universities you mention.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I wouldn't feel safe sending kids/girls to UVA.
You do know Jackie lied, right?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
OP, are you from Virginia? I am from another state and I find that none of the VA state schools are as liberal as the ones from my home state---small town or not. There is just a more "traditional" culture here. But, as another poster stated, you can probably find a range of students at these schools.
Did you ever read The Last Lecture by Randy Pausch. I always wondered why he left UVA to go to Carnegie Mellon. He never stated it, but I surmise that his ideas were too "different" for UVA. He just seems like the kind of professor a school should try to keep. They lost another good professor to a previous attorney general's attempts to get rid of climate science (Ken Cuccinelli). These are the kinds of things that make me wonder about UVA (among others).
http://www.roanoke.com/news/former-uva-climate-scientist-awarded-damages-in-foia-case/article_dbf259e4-dc70-5962-81f3-be4483cbff5f.html
That is definitely true for GMU's econ department. It is funded by Koch Industries. They are frequently tapped for the "conservative" view on NPR and other media.