Anonymous wrote:I confused as to why we see these numbers at Tulane but not at schools like Lehigh, or other schools on that level.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:JMU Honors with UVA Law is a cost-effective plan and would allow me to support her in many other ways.
Why not UVA and then UVA Law?
UVA law school publishes online undergraduate institutions of the entering class. W&M and UVA are easily the two top producers in state, particularly when you adjust for institutional size.
If you look at the last four years of admission to UVA Law, where they list top undergraduate schools for entering class, JMU only shows up one year when they had 5. UVA is top each year and had a total of 83. W&M was ranked near the top every year and had a total of 50 (keep in mind W&M is only about 6K undergraduates). VT and GMU are only listed once each, and VCU twice, but they have very low numbers.
waiting for someone to post undergraduate schools don't matter..... even at state law school they matter
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:JMU Honors with UVA Law is a cost-effective plan and would allow me to support her in many other ways.
Why not UVA and then UVA Law?
UVA law school publishes online undergraduate institutions of the entering class. W&M and UVA are easily the two top producers in state, particularly when you adjust for institutional size.
If you look at the last four years of admission to UVA Law, where they list top undergraduate schools for entering class, JMU only shows up one year when they had 5. UVA is top each year and had a total of 83. W&M was ranked near the top every year and had a total of 50 (keep in mind W&M is only about 6K undergraduates). VT and GMU are only listed once each, and VCU twice, but they have very low numbers.
Anonymous wrote:I confused as to why we see these numbers at Tulane but not at schools like Lehigh, or other schools on that level.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What top college didn't see record applications this year?
I thought a lot of the Ivy schools saw decrease in applicants?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:They were e-mailing like nuts! So annoying, basically begged DD to apply, waved fees. Who wants to switch one humid area for worse humid and bla college?
My DC gave it a hard NO based on the climate alone.
LOL wow...guess your kid does not understand when the school will be in session?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:JMU Honors with UVA Law is a cost-effective plan and would allow me to support her in many other ways.
Why not UVA and then UVA Law?
UVA law school publishes online undergraduate institutions of the entering class. W&M and UVA are easily the two top producers in state, particularly when you adjust for institutional size.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:JMU Honors with UVA Law is a cost-effective plan and would allow me to support her in many other ways.
Why not UVA and then UVA Law?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I confused as to why we see these numbers at Tulane but not at schools like Lehigh, or other schools on that level.
It’s well known that Tulane spends huge amounts of money on merit aid.
Tulane knows exactly what they are doing. By offering large amounts of merit to the higher stat students they want to attract, they are absolutely building a better school. We also know from personal experience that they want students who have shown an interest in them and they also really like kids with a lot of community service. As other's have mentioned, lots of things changed after Katrina and they are really big on "giving back" to the community. They specifically have a service learning component that all students must fulfill to graduate. It's really not the same school that it was 10-15 years ago. And yes, kids party, but they party everywhere.
. I am just pointing out that their merit aid packages do stand out from the rest of the “next tier” schools.Anonymous wrote:I think there is a real commitment at Tulane. The student to instructional faculty is 8 to 1, average is 12 to 1. More full time instructional faculty(61%) vs average(51%) and less teaching staff that are part-time non-faculty or non-tenure track faculty(39% vs national average 49%). This is a little more then just a marketing campaign.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:They were e-mailing like nuts! So annoying, basically begged DD to apply, waved fees. Who wants to switch one humid area for worse humid and bla college?
My DC gave it a hard NO based on the climate alone.