Anonymous wrote:Do they really have online only for freshmen? That sounds awful.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Do they really have online only for freshmen? That sounds awful.
If true, it will be a deal breaker for this parent with an DC interested in the school.
It’s not for all freshman, it’s a special route for kids who are marginal for acceptance, first year entirely online. For certain majors, however, online classes are common throughout the four years.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It is very very hard to get in. I know of several who got into places like UVA and Chicago and Michigan and did not get into Florida. It is shocking but true.
That’s the definition of yield protection.
No it's the definition of "that kid fit the priorities of UVA and Chicago and Michigan and did not fit the priorities of Florida for that admission year".
Nope, Florida is known to yield protect.
Nope, you just couldn’t get in.
lol, thanks for the laugh, I went to a T10 private.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It is very very hard to get in. I know of several who got into places like UVA and Chicago and Michigan and did not get into Florida. It is shocking but true.
That’s the definition of yield protection.
No it's the definition of "that kid fit the priorities of UVA and Chicago and Michigan and did not fit the priorities of Florida for that admission year".
Nope, Florida is known to yield protect.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It is very very hard to get in. I know of several who got into places like UVA and Chicago and Michigan and did not get into Florida. It is shocking but true.
That’s the definition of yield protection.
No it's the definition of "that kid fit the priorities of UVA and Chicago and Michigan and did not fit the priorities of Florida for that admission year".
Nope, Florida is known to yield protect.
Nope, you just couldn’t get in.
lol, thanks for the laugh, I went to a T10 private.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It is very very hard to get in. I know of several who got into places like UVA and Chicago and Michigan and did not get into Florida. It is shocking but true.
That’s the definition of yield protection.
No it's the definition of "that kid fit the priorities of UVA and Chicago and Michigan and did not fit the priorities of Florida for that admission year".
Nope, Florida is known to yield protect.
Nope, you just couldn’t get in.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It is very very hard to get in. I know of several who got into places like UVA and Chicago and Michigan and did not get into Florida. It is shocking but true.
That’s the definition of yield protection.
No it's the definition of "that kid fit the priorities of UVA and Chicago and Michigan and did not fit the priorities of Florida for that admission year".
Nope, Florida is known to yield protect.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Do they really have online only for freshmen? That sounds awful.
If true, it will be a deal breaker for this parent with an DC interested in the school.
Anonymous wrote:Do they really have online only for freshmen? That sounds awful.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Florida is a curious case of having an overall US News ranking that is higher than the rankings of almost all of its majors. Sure, the two are determined using completely different formulas, but one would think that a school's overall ranking is more or less sandwiched between its highest and lowest major rankings. Not the case with UF, as very few of its majors is top 30 and almost none is top 20. And yet its overall ranking is 30.
Florida is a beneficiary of the US News current bias towards large public schools. It does a good job of providing a cheap education to lots of kids, but not a great education.
That's simplistic. University of Alabama and LSU are ranked #169 as examples. There is something about Florida that gets it to #30 vs. plenty of large public schools that rank far below it.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It is very very hard to get in. I know of several who got into places like UVA and Chicago and Michigan and did not get into Florida. It is shocking but true.
That’s the definition of yield protection.
No it's the definition of "that kid fit the priorities of UVA and Chicago and Michigan and did not fit the priorities of Florida for that admission year".
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Florida is a curious case of having an overall US News ranking that is higher than the rankings of almost all of its majors. Sure, the two are determined using completely different formulas, but one would think that a school's overall ranking is more or less sandwiched between its highest and lowest major rankings. Not the case with UF, as very few of its majors is top 30 and almost none is top 20. And yet its overall ranking is 30.
Florida is a beneficiary of the US News current bias towards large public schools. It does a good job of providing a cheap education to lots of kids, but not a great education.
How are you arriving at that conclusion? What are the metrics you use? Graduates have jobs? They go to grad school? How exactly can you tell whether or not they got a "great education"?
For a lot of people, it means "I think this school is prestigious". But you can definitely get a great education at a school that isn't prestigious.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My older son is a senior at Cornell and younger one at UF , both in engineering. Unfortunately we couldn’t pay T20 fees for the younger one - where he got in - and settled for UF which is essentially free . When they come home and discuss I see the pain in the younger one … hope we didn’t sacrifice his future for the sake of saving some money… I feel 😞
I'd be very bitter if I were your younger kid. You 100% screwed him and he will never forget it.
Oh, come on. Check in with them again in Jan when Ithaca is under 2ft of snow and Gainesville is in the 80s.
Check with them in a few years when one has a Cornell degree and the other a Florida degree.
I really hope that PP with the Florida and Cornell kids is a troll.
Anonymous wrote:Florida is trying to eliminate property taxes. They already have no income tax. The government budget is only $119 billion. By way of comparison California's government budget is $413 billion. Florida only owes $15 billion in debt, compared to $600 billion in debt issued by California. Florida's population is 24 million; California's is 39 million.
You can see that California invests more in its people. While Florida looks more fiscally sound, California has much less poverty, better infrastructure, fewer homeless, no drugs and much higher education achievement (except if you compare high school students, Florida scores higher there, I'll grant you that).