I have a high school senior that has also applied to and been accepted at Longwood. He did something a bit different; Longwood offered several specific dates over the summer where a student could send in their application (including self reported grades and SAT/ACT scores) a few days in advance, then take a tour and be given a decision that same day. While he mostly did it as a "safety," he actually did end up liking the campus and will consider going there if his top pick school (JMU) doesn't work out.
Anonymous wrote:Do students in public school even end up with a GPA that low these days? If they are taking honors and AP courses, their GPA should be higher than that if they actually belong in those classes. If they aren’t in those classes, are they really college bound?
Anonymous wrote:NOVA and if they do well, transfer to GMU
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anywhere they want if their parents have enough money (see Lori Loughlin and Jared Kushner)
Or Chelsea Clinton.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Most non flagship state schools are for "average" students and then they usually have a separate section for their "honors" students.
If you are in-state, most flagships only take the top X% (usually around 10%) of graduating high school classes. If you are out of state, it is much more difficult.
Anonymous wrote:Proud mom of "average" kids again here....
Both D20 and S20 applied summer priority to Longwood which offered application fee waivers and did not require official transcripts. They each received calls this week with offers of acceptance. While Longwood is considered a "safety" school for them it's good to know they have one in the bag already. We visited over spring break and it's a good school. Only negative is it is isolated in small sleepy town appropriately named Farmville.
Longwood is also smallish...only around $5K students so even Freshman year classes would be average of 25-30 students. But both my D20 and S20 see the benefits of having smaller class sizes and are in agreement that if Longwood were the only school they were accepted to they would be fine going there.
Anonymous wrote:Most non flagship state schools are for "average" students and then they usually have a separate section for their "honors" students.
Anonymous wrote:Cornell
Anonymous wrote:Michigan, Tulane and George Washington
Anonymous wrote:Nothing wrong with "average." I went to University of Delaware.
Great jobs and career after graduation.
As the other poster said....there is a lot to be said
for life skills.
I know a lot of Ivy League graduates working
in retail or as secretaries post graduation or otherwise
doing jobs you could get with a high school degree only.
Anonymous wrote:Average students attend average colleges of which there are many.