Anonymous wrote:90 percentage acceptance rate!
How about Montgomery County Community College for two years and then hopefully admittance to University of Maryland?
Because the school is a jokes with 90 percent admissions.
Anonymous wrote:My DD (born and raised in DMV) has recently had her heart set on going to school in the south, particularly Ole Miss.
I have some reservations about letting her go there, but have been assured it is a good school. Would it be a poor choice to pay OOS tuition to send her there?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I like how when people are discussing schools in the northeast, everybody screams that the college isn’t important, it’s what you do when you’re there. But get out past the usual subjects, & people claim you can’t possibly succeed from there,
+1
DCUM is its own little bubble of narrow-minded people who are sure they're always right.
Anonymous wrote:I like how when people are discussing schools in the northeast, everybody screams that the college isn’t important, it’s what you do when you’re there. But get out past the usual subjects, & people claim you can’t possibly succeed from there,
Anonymous wrote:I think most DC area students would find job opportunities a negative factor for Ole Miss. The on campus hiring for most schools is very regional. A couple questions there - (1) how good and varied is job market in Mississippi and neighboring states (2) is Mississippi area a target location for you. Now definitely you can take your diploma and come back here or elsewhere and test the job market. In that case how strong a credential is the Ole Miss degree, how good an alumni network etc.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:A top 75 school? Ole Miss is ranked #151 in USNWR.
When you rank the states in education, Mississippi and Arkansas trade places in ranking dead last.
New poster with no dog in this fight, but you need to learn to read. The poster said Ole Miss was a top 75 PUBLIC school.
Top 75 public! We have only 50 states!!! Besides California, most states don’t have multiple great publics!
Anonymous wrote:Ole Miss is scholarship city ! Scholarship after scholarship after scholarship.
Strong in accounting.
Noted for international studies & some foreign languages, public policy.
Charming town.
Lots of preppy types.
The last of the true Southern universities. The good stuff, not the bad stuff.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Unless she wants to stay in Mississippi, her diploma won't be worth very much to grad schools or prospective employers in other regions.
Not your typical DCUM “choice” school but a perfectly acceptable university and inside the top 75 public schools.
Apply, visit, compare to other acceptances and make an informed decision. Top 30 schools don’t have enough seats for everyone.
One doesn't go from "Top 30" to Ole Miss.
How do you know?
I went to HS with a kid who went to Ole Miss for his freshman year then transferred to Cornell.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:A top 75 school? Ole Miss is ranked #151 in USNWR.
When you rank the states in education, Mississippi and Arkansas trade places in ranking dead last.
New poster with no dog in this fight, but you need to learn to read. The poster said Ole Miss was a top 75 PUBLIC school.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Unless she wants to stay in Mississippi, her diploma won't be worth very much to grad schools or prospective employers in other regions.
Not your typical DCUM “choice” school but a perfectly acceptable university and inside the top 75 public schools.
Apply, visit, compare to other acceptances and make an informed decision. Top 30 schools don’t have enough seats for everyone.
One doesn't go from "Top 30" to Ole Miss.
How do you know?