Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Football, fraternity life, on-campus weekend activities
It's true that football does create a common focal point for school spirit -- I'll give you that. But, "fraternity life" is NOT a positive. I was in a sorority. I know what goes on. For the most part, fraternities are toxic male culture. Not a selling point.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Football, fraternity life, on-campus weekend activities
It's true that football does create a common focal point for school spirit -- I'll give you that. But, "fraternity life" is NOT a positive. I was in a sorority. I know what goes on. For the most part, fraternities are toxic male culture. Not a selling point.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Football, fraternity life, on-campus weekend activities
It's true that football does create a common focal point for school spirit -- I'll give you that. But, "fraternity life" is NOT a positive. I was in a sorority. I know what goes on. For the most part, fraternities are toxic male culture. Not a selling point.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Good friend has a son at GMU. The kid’s grandparents live two blocks from campus. My friend said on five occasions first semester freshman year he went to his son’s dorm room on a Saturday afternoon he said campus was a ghost town and he didn’t see another kid in his son’s dorm. Not in the common rooms. Not hanging out outside. It was abandoned. Maybe kids who live close go home on Saturdays. But it sounds like a depressing college experience.
Why on earth would a student be sitting inside his/her dorm room on a Saturday afternoon? Do you even hear yourself?
Anonymous wrote:Football, fraternity life, on-campus weekend activities
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Because it's not a real college experience. It's basically a community college experience with 4 year degrees and good placement.
+1 That’s it, that’s why
Are the classes at GMU comparable to or harder than community college classes?
I’ve gone to both recently to earn a second degree. NVCC online classes were superior to my regular classes at GMU. The online system to conduct business (e.g. register for classes) was also better.
I have heard the same.
Opposite happened to my kid. He took a NVCC summer course (as a rising senior in high school) in chemistry and pulled a terrible prof who just didnt give a d@mn. Meanwhile other child had chem at GMU. It was night and day. i still regret we didnt register the high school kid for the chem course (you apply as a non-degree student) at GMU. NVCC was a waste of time
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Because it's not a real college experience. It's basically a community college experience with 4 year degrees and good placement.
+1 That’s it, that’s why
Are the classes at GMU comparable to or harder than community college classes?
Anonymous wrote:I think over 75% of freshmen at GMU live on campus. After that, a lot of upperclassmen move into off-campus apartments with friends but that’s no different than a lot of other universities.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:GMU does have a lot going for it, but the "college experience" is honestly not one of them. For a kid who would like the traditional college experience of moving away from home, more social activities, more rah-rah school spirit, football games, frats and sororities, an older or more historic campus, a college town, etc., JMU has all that. GMU was founded in 1957 and for a very long time was considered to be a "commuter school." They've come a long way since then but the commuter school vibe is still there. A lot of students are NoVA locals and go home on the weekends, or commute daily.
For you UVA-haters/boosters
In 1957, Mason was started as a branch campus of the University of Virginia. The school consisted of a single building and 17 students. Fifteen years later, on April 7, 1972, then-Governor A. Linwood Holton signed legislation to separate George Mason College from the University of Virginia.
https://www.gmu.edu/about/legacy/history#:~:text=In%201957%2C%20Mason%20was%20started,from%20the%20University%20of%20Virginia.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Because it's not a real college experience. It's basically a community college experience with 4 year degrees and good placement.
What does this mean? We are in MD and my kid is considering GMU over JMU for poli sci. The poli sci courses offered at GMU make those at JMU, UMBC and Towson look like high school.
By “real college experience” the PP means “white.”
By “basically a community college degree with 4 year degrees and good placement” the PP means majority-minority.
Welcome to DCUM!
That’s actually not at all what I meant. Nice try.
Anonymous wrote:Good friend has a son at GMU. The kid’s grandparents live two blocks from campus. My friend said on five occasions first semester freshman year he went to his son’s dorm room on a Saturday afternoon he said campus was a ghost town and he didn’t see another kid in his son’s dorm. Not in the common rooms. Not hanging out outside. It was abandoned. Maybe kids who live close go home on Saturdays. But it sounds like a depressing college experience.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Because it's not a real college experience. It's basically a community college experience with 4 year degrees and good placement.
What does this mean? We are in MD and my kid is considering GMU over JMU for poli sci. The poli sci courses offered at GMU make those at JMU, UMBC and Towson look like high school.
By “real college experience” the PP means “white.”
By “basically a community college degree with 4 year degrees and good placement” the PP means majority-minority.
Welcome to DCUM!