Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I think KS, OK and AL are odd choices
OP here
If you have other suggestions I'd love to know! One criteria that is important (but I didn't put in my op) is he does not want to go to a school that mandated a Covid vaccine for students. Even if they have now rolled that back.
Oh boy …
+1
U of South Alabama would give a lot of merit but probably too “progressive” How about Ole Miss? Kansas might be a great fit.
KU and the surrounding town are generally pretty liberal though there is a range of viewpoints. I don’t think you know much about the school or Lawrence.
+1.
KU had William S. Burroughs on the faculty. In the 1970s, it was on the same wavelength as Berkeley and Chapel Hill.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I have learned that there are very bright students at the flagship public college in every state.
My kid was offered a scholarship to Minnesota that would have made costs very similar to being in-state in VaTech and less than UVA/William and Mary (no money offered in state). Classmates received good very generous scholarships from Ohio State, Clemson, South Carolina, Kentucky, Alabama, Tennessee, Mississippi, etc. A lot of these kids wanted to be a school with an avid sports culture.
Even if Minnesota (a fine school) or Tennessee, for example, offers a scholarship that would make them cheaper than UVA, your kid would still be better served going to UVA if she or he wants a job on the East Coast or in the Mid-Atlantic -- more connections and stronger reputation.
Source?
If you want to think that recruiters from Bain Consulting, Morgan Stanley, Amazon, etc. value a degree from the University of Tennessee just as much as a degree from UVA (all other things- GPA, interview presentation, etc. - being equal), you go right ahead.
UVA v KU isn’t a choice this kid has. It’s CNU v KU
But Kansas City and other cities in the region have big, strong job markets of their own, and typical professionals there have a much better quality of life than they would on the coasts.
Stressing to stay around the DMV makes sense for someone who loves being involved with national policy, but heading to the Midwest makes a lot of sense for people who’d rather have a big house, a golf club and a little more down time.
I don't disagree at all with this. KU makes great sense if one is considering working and living in Kansas City or surrounding region and yes, there are definite downsides to living in the DMV or big East Coast cities. But if the kid wants to live in the East Coast/mid-Atlantic, I wouldn't pass up UVA for KU.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I have learned that there are very bright students at the flagship public college in every state.
My kid was offered a scholarship to Minnesota that would have made costs very similar to being in-state in VaTech and less than UVA/William and Mary (no money offered in state). Classmates received good very generous scholarships from Ohio State, Clemson, South Carolina, Kentucky, Alabama, Tennessee, Mississippi, etc. A lot of these kids wanted to be a school with an avid sports culture.
Even if Minnesota (a fine school) or Tennessee, for example, offers a scholarship that would make them cheaper than UVA, your kid would still be better served going to UVA if she or he wants a job on the East Coast or in the Mid-Atlantic -- more connections and stronger reputation.
Source?
If you want to think that recruiters from Bain Consulting, Morgan Stanley, Amazon, etc. value a degree from the University of Tennessee just as much as a degree from UVA (all other things- GPA, interview presentation, etc. - being equal), you go right ahead.
But Kansas City and other cities in the region have big, strong job markets of their own, and typical professionals there have a much better quality of life than they would on the coasts.
Stressing to stay around the DMV makes sense for someone who loves being involved with national policy, but heading to the Midwest makes a lot of sense for people who’d rather have a big house, a golf club and a little more down time.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I have learned that there are very bright students at the flagship public college in every state.
My kid was offered a scholarship to Minnesota that would have made costs very similar to being in-state in VaTech and less than UVA/William and Mary (no money offered in state). Classmates received good very generous scholarships from Ohio State, Clemson, South Carolina, Kentucky, Alabama, Tennessee, Mississippi, etc. A lot of these kids wanted to be a school with an avid sports culture.
Even if Minnesota (a fine school) or Tennessee, for example, offers a scholarship that would make them cheaper than UVA, your kid would still be better served going to UVA if she or he wants a job on the East Coast or in the Mid-Atlantic -- more connections and stronger reputation.
Source?
If you want to think that recruiters from Bain Consulting, Morgan Stanley, Amazon, etc. value a degree from the University of Tennessee just as much as a degree from UVA (all other things- GPA, interview presentation, etc. - being equal), you go right ahead.
Interesting anecdote. Is there data to support this claim?
I do recruiting for a consulting firm. We target top schools and the only way we are recruiting from University of Tennessee is if the individual has a personal connection to someone who is partner level who is referring them.
Anonymous wrote: For him to have already decided that he doesn't want to go to a college that has a vaccine requirement, even a "rolled back" one, means that his mother is a crazy anti-vaxer who brainwashed him.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I have learned that there are very bright students at the flagship public college in every state.
My kid was offered a scholarship to Minnesota that would have made costs very similar to being in-state in VaTech and less than UVA/William and Mary (no money offered in state). Classmates received good very generous scholarships from Ohio State, Clemson, South Carolina, Kentucky, Alabama, Tennessee, Mississippi, etc. A lot of these kids wanted to be a school with an avid sports culture.
Even if Minnesota (a fine school) or Tennessee, for example, offers a scholarship that would make them cheaper than UVA, your kid would still be better served going to UVA if she or he wants a job on the East Coast or in the Mid-Atlantic -- more connections and stronger reputation.
Source?
If you want to think that recruiters from Bain Consulting, Morgan Stanley, Amazon, etc. value a degree from the University of Tennessee just as much as a degree from UVA (all other things- GPA, interview presentation, etc. - being equal), you go right ahead.
Interesting anecdote. Is there data to support this claim?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I have learned that there are very bright students at the flagship public college in every state.
My kid was offered a scholarship to Minnesota that would have made costs very similar to being in-state in VaTech and less than UVA/William and Mary (no money offered in state). Classmates received good very generous scholarships from Ohio State, Clemson, South Carolina, Kentucky, Alabama, Tennessee, Mississippi, etc. A lot of these kids wanted to be a school with an avid sports culture.
Even if Minnesota (a fine school) or Tennessee, for example, offers a scholarship that would make them cheaper than UVA, your kid would still be better served going to UVA if she or he wants a job on the East Coast or in the Mid-Atlantic -- more connections and stronger reputation.
Source?
If you want to think that recruiters from Bain Consulting, Morgan Stanley, Amazon, etc. value a degree from the University of Tennessee just as much as a degree from UVA (all other things- GPA, interview presentation, etc. - being equal), you go right ahead.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I think KS, OK and AL are odd choices
OP here
If you have other suggestions I'd love to know! One criteria that is important (but I didn't put in my op) is he does not want to go to a school that mandated a Covid vaccine for students. Even if they have now rolled that back.
Oh, you're one of those! Well, higher ed isn't going to to help you much. Might as well throw your $$$ at Liberty.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I think KS, OK and AL are odd choices
OP here
If you have other suggestions I'd love to know! One criteria that is important (but I didn't put in my op) is he does not want to go to a school that mandated a Covid vaccine for students. Even if they have now rolled that back.
Oh boy …
+1
U of South Alabama would give a lot of merit but probably too “progressive” How about Ole Miss? Kansas might be a great fit.
KU and the surrounding town are generally pretty liberal though there is a range of viewpoints. I don’t think you know much about the school or Lawrence.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I think ED at VA Tech would be a possibility. Scholarships would be off table.
Depends on the college/major within VA Tech. Likely NOT possible for engineering or even business. Majors within the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences can be considerably less competitive.
Not so much anymore.
DP
Anonymous wrote:OP here: One criteria that is important …is he does not want to go to a school that mandated a Covid vaccine for students. Even if they have now rolled that back.