Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:How strange that there’s a girl/guy ratio difference for a large public. Dies it offer a lot of traditionally female professions - nursing, teaching, etc.
Undergraduate education in the U.S. is getting close to 60% female, 40% male. There is going to be a significant ratio difference at most schools.
Why is this? Any theories? What are the other males doing?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:There’s been a lot of hate for the bigger state universities in the last few days. I think someone is just stirring the pot yet again with this thread.
Yep. So transparent.
And everyone takes the bait.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I went to Notre Dame and never heard of Penn State referred to as Happy Valley before. I am a DC native.
+1
I have never heard of Penn State referred to as Happy Valley. Also a DC area native.
That's bc nobody in DC cares about Penn State.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:How strange that there’s a girl/guy ratio difference for a large public. Dies it offer a lot of traditionally female professions - nursing, teaching, etc.
Undergraduate education in the U.S. is getting close to 60% female, 40% male. There is going to be a significant ratio difference at most schools.
Why is this? Any theories? What are the other males doing?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Yes.
I didn’t even know what Happy Valley was.
What is Happy Valley? I think it's clear OP has an axe to grind is simply trolling.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:How strange that there’s a girl/guy ratio difference for a large public. Dies it offer a lot of traditionally female professions - nursing, teaching, etc.
Undergraduate education in the U.S. is getting close to 60% female, 40% male. There is going to be a significant ratio difference at most schools.
Why is this? Any theories? What are the other males doing?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:How strange that there’s a girl/guy ratio difference for a large public. Dies it offer a lot of traditionally female professions - nursing, teaching, etc.
Undergraduate education in the U.S. is getting close to 60% female, 40% male. There is going to be a significant ratio difference at most schools.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:How strange that there’s a girl/guy ratio difference for a large public. Dies it offer a lot of traditionally female professions - nursing, teaching, etc.
Undergraduate education in the U.S. is getting close to 60% female, 40% male. There is going to be a significant ratio difference at most schools.
Anonymous wrote:How strange that there’s a girl/guy ratio difference for a large public. Dies it offer a lot of traditionally female professions - nursing, teaching, etc.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:There’s been a lot of hate for the bigger state universities in the last few days. I think someone is just stirring the pot yet again with this thread.
Yep. So transparent.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I wouldn't pay out-of-state tuition for it.
A lot of people do.
Agree about not paying OOS. But I wouldn’t pay OOS for pretty much any school, nor would I pay full freight for most privates.
We considered JMU for DS. Stats-wise, it’s a match for him. But he just didn’t care for it. But it’s a good school for kids who aren’t getting into UVA or WM.
This. JMU is where kids who can’t get into WM and UVA go. Probably on par with GMU but further from home. A notch above VCU, except arts and medical. And a lot of smart hard working kids in NOVA can’t get into UVA and WM these days.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I went to Notre Dame and never heard of Penn State referred to as Happy Valley before. I am a DC native.
+1
I have never heard of Penn State referred to as Happy Valley. Also a DC area native.
I'm really curious. Is it reputable? "Good"? Or a fall back? Or a safety school? Party school? It seems that EVERYONE has gone there or has kids attending.
I also can't get over the I81 location. It's certainly no "Happy Valley".