Has the rest of the country heard of William & Mary...?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I am not from this area and I heard of William and Mary well before I heard of VT. (Actually I think the first time I heard of it was probably after the shooting.)
Same. Definitely had never heard of VT before moving to VA.
Although I will add, most people don't know schools outside their own state unless the schools are Harvard-level famous. I went to U of M which was highly ranked in my field, tried to get a job in CA, and got a ton of questions about why I couldn't get into the local Cal State.
No you didn't.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I’m from Texas and always knew W&M was an excellent school. I honestly can’t say if I knew about VA Tech till I moved to NoVA
Same. Also from Texas and had heard of W&M well before VA Tech.
Same here. Also from TX!
It doesn't surprise me that people from Texas are misinformed.
Nearly every poster on this thread has confirmed the same - W&M > VT by a significant margin in name recognition. W&M is also ranked significantly higher than VT so doesn't seem like we're misinformed at all.
Anonymous wrote:Vetch for engineering W&M for everything else. W&M has a very good reputation among employers.
Anonymous wrote:My daughter seems like more of a William & Mary person in terms of size and vibe but I worry the rest of the country hasn’t heard of it and/or know it’s a good school. Would a VA Tech degree be better for her career search if she moves out of the area? I know her experience during the four years is so important but we fear spending so much money on a place with low name recognition. (I know it IS a good school academically.)
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Isn't W&M is the only college in US named after a UK king and Queen?
So?? Many of our states were named after UK Kings and Queens! NC, SC, Virginia, Maryland, Georgia...
Anonymous wrote:Isn't W&M is the only college in US named after a UK king and Queen?
Anonymous wrote:The deciding factor is, what does she want to study?
If she wants to go into engineering, computer science, architecture/design or become a veterinarian, then she should choose Virginia Tech.
Most other things, choose William & Mary.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I’m from Texas and always knew W&M was an excellent school. I honestly can’t say if I knew about VA Tech till I moved to NoVA
Same. Also from Texas and had heard of W&M well before VA Tech.
Same here. Also from TX!
It doesn't surprise me that people from Texas are misinformed.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:W and L is private and therefore more expensive in state. It’s also got some of the worst qualities of UVA. Southern, fratty, etc, but smaller and in a more red state area of VA. Its also 2/3 male and in the same town as VMI, Lexington VA. It’s got a great poli sci dept but so does UVA. And W and M.
I wouldn’t compare W and L to any of these schools, and it’s got bigger issues than Lee in its name, although that is clearly one of them.
You seem bright.
They may be bright, but W&L is now 50/50 male female, not 2/3 male. In-state, there is a state Tuition Assistance Grant, which offsets some of the cost differential. W&L is a great school for the right person. The PP evaluated it from their own perspective (Southern, fratty, etc.). In a study by the Economist a few years ago, W&L had the highest value add for income of all colleges and universities in the U.S.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I am not from this area and I heard of William and Mary well before I heard of VT. (Actually I think the first time I heard of it was probably after the shooting.)
Same. Definitely had never heard of VT before moving to VA.
Although I will add, most people don't know schools outside their own state unless the schools are Harvard-level famous. I went to U of M which was highly ranked in my field, tried to get a job in CA, and got a ton of questions about why I couldn't get into the local Cal State.