Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This has been going on for decades. In the early 1990s, I got into two Ivies and UVA from my big box FCPS high school. I got sneered at by parents whose son was going to UVA for choosing one of the Ivies over UVA. It was jealousy, most likely.
These folks in their bubbles -- even successful persons -- don't even comprehend Ivies; they've never stepped foot on one.
This. A lot of people in NOVA aren't that familiar with the Ivy's outside of HPY.
I should also mention that outside of the Northeast a lot of people don't know what schools make up the Ivy's. My friend thought that Stanford was an Ivy League school.
Anonymous wrote:I unfortunately work directly next to a woman who not only graduated from UVA but also *studied abroad* gasp! She is insufferable. And well into her 40s. That's what I think of when I think of UVA grads
Anonymous wrote:I unfortunately work directly next to a woman who not only graduated from UVA but also *studied abroad* gasp! She is insufferable. And well into her 40s. That's what I think of when I think of UVA grads
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Ummm, compare the cost of attendance for UVA to Northwestern or Ivies and then get back to me.
+1 how is it possible for someone to be so sheltered and tone-deaf?
+1
There is a large DCUM contingent who cannot seem to grasp that the college search for many of us is all about cost, regardless of how high a performer the DC in question may be.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Ummm, compare the cost of attendance for UVA to Northwestern or Ivies and then get back to me.
+1 how is it possible for someone to be so sheltered and tone-deaf?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
I should also mention that outside of the Northeast a lot of people don't know what schools make up the Ivy's. My friend thought that Stanford was an Ivy League school.
I'm not sure most people in the Northeast know. I think "Ivy League" has become shorthand for "old, private universities with very low admission rates." That makes some not-Ivys swankier than Cornell, with its land grant colleges. When people talk about attending Cornell, I don't think they're imagining kids in the ag school or College of Human Ecology.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I think it's weird that you expected her to be more impressed with your child getting into Northwestern and Cornell. That's a great accomplishment by your child, but so is her child getting into UVa so I'm not sure what relevance your child's admissions has to her excitement over her child's admission.
Because Cornell and Northwestern are demonstrably superior schools.
"demonstrably superior" LOL - only on DCUM
Anonymous wrote:
Two of my 3 DCs currently attend UVA and this is their story: moved to DC area from San Francisco when my 3 children were under age 5. DH and I decided to live in NOVA rather than DC or MD for two reasons: taxes and the excellent in-state university choices. While our kids were in high school we told them we can afford in-state public, or private with merit aid. DC1 refused to apply to UVA after one visit in HS and ended up at a SLAC with a scholarship for half the tuition. DC2 visited UVA for the first time fall of senior year of HS, liked it, was accepted early action and attends. DC3 applied to colleges all over the country looking for merit money, as well as UVA (and W&M). Didn't step foot on UVA grounds even once despite the fact that DC2 is there until DC3 was accepted. DC3 now attends UVA. Far cry from your conscious strategy/brainwash theory, PP, but I'm guessing since it doesn't fit, you'll dismiss it.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I think it's weird that you expected her to be more impressed with your child getting into Northwestern and Cornell. That's a great accomplishment by your child, but so is her child getting into UVa so I'm not sure what relevance your child's admissions has to her excitement over her child's admission.
Because Cornell and Northwestern are demonstrably superior schools.