Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It is the 2nd oldest college in the country. It is nationally known. Jen Psaki went there. It’s a great school. I really wouldn’t worry about it too much.
Also, it’s a bargain if you’re in state.
Jen who?
Biden’s press secretary.
That makes so much sense. She is the exact type. Why do all the redheads go there?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It is the 2nd oldest college in the country. It is nationally known. Jen Psaki went there. It’s a great school. I really wouldn’t worry about it too much.
Also, it’s a bargain if you’re in state.
Jen who?
Biden’s press secretary.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Here's another take:
W&M was a private school that fell on hard times and became a state university. Virginia residents should count their blessings for this!
Most states have a flagship public, a technical public and then a second-tier level of "directional" schools. Think SC/Clemson, UNC/NCSstate, etc, as the flagship/public technicals and Coastal Carolina and East Carolina as the directional schools for SC and NC, respectively.
For undergraduate and some graduate programs, W&M offers additional teaching and enrollment capacity that UVA does not or cannot offer for a flagship school.
VT is a technical public that has taken on some flagship functions because of the limited enrollments of UVA and W&M.
This unique situation of having 3 national level universities in the first or first plus tier is what muddies the water. But who cares! It's a happy problem! And VT is getting stronger thanks to Mr. Bezos with Amazon HQ2 and alumni in various fields (GE CEO, for example). VT is not just Michael Vick or the tragedy (although frankly the colors are horrible and the mascot is a giant turkey, but then again UVA's and W&M's colors and mascots are not great either).
In any event, the presence of UVA, W&M and VT, as well stronger 2nd tier schools such as JMU, VCU and GMU, make VA a much stronger location for public universities. We chose VA over MD because of this: MD has UMCP, but there is no technical school, W&M is much stronger than SMC, and would anyone really compare the MD 2nd tier schools of Towson, UMBC, Salisbury as being comparable to the VA 2nd tier schools?
W&M was never a private school.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I am not from this area and I heard of William and Mary well before I heard of VT. (Actually I think the first time I heard of it was probably after the shooting.)
Same. Definitely had never heard of VT before moving to VA.
Although I will add, most people don't know schools outside their own state unless the schools are Harvard-level famous. I went to U of M which was highly ranked in my field, tried to get a job in CA, and got a ton of questions about why I couldn't get into the local Cal State.
No you didn't.
I definitely believe this.
Anonymous wrote:Here's another take:
W&M was a private school that fell on hard times and became a state university. Virginia residents should count their blessings for this!
Most states have a flagship public, a technical public and then a second-tier level of "directional" schools. Think SC/Clemson, UNC/NCSstate, etc, as the flagship/public technicals and Coastal Carolina and East Carolina as the directional schools for SC and NC, respectively.
For undergraduate and some graduate programs, W&M offers additional teaching and enrollment capacity that UVA does not or cannot offer for a flagship school.
VT is a technical public that has taken on some flagship functions because of the limited enrollments of UVA and W&M.
This unique situation of having 3 national level universities in the first or first plus tier is what muddies the water. But who cares! It's a happy problem! And VT is getting stronger thanks to Mr. Bezos with Amazon HQ2 and alumni in various fields (GE CEO, for example). VT is not just Michael Vick or the tragedy (although frankly the colors are horrible and the mascot is a giant turkey, but then again UVA's and W&M's colors and mascots are not great either).
In any event, the presence of UVA, W&M and VT, as well stronger 2nd tier schools such as JMU, VCU and GMU, make VA a much stronger location for public universities. We chose VA over MD because of this: MD has UMCP, but there is no technical school, W&M is much stronger than SMC, and would anyone really compare the MD 2nd tier schools of Towson, UMBC, Salisbury as being comparable to the VA 2nd tier schools?
Anonymous wrote:Here's another take:
W&M was a private school that fell on hard times and became a state university. Virginia residents should count their blessings for this!
Most states have a flagship public, a technical public and then a second-tier level of "directional" schools. Think SC/Clemson, UNC/NCSstate, etc, as the flagship/public technicals and Coastal Carolina and East Carolina as the directional schools for SC and NC, respectively.
For undergraduate and some graduate programs, W&M offers additional teaching and enrollment capacity that UVA does not or cannot offer for a flagship school.
VT is a technical public that has taken on some flagship functions because of the limited enrollments of UVA and W&M.
This unique situation of having 3 national level universities in the first or first plus tier is what muddies the water. But who cares! It's a happy problem! And VT is getting stronger thanks to Mr. Bezos with Amazon HQ2 and alumni in various fields (GE CEO, for example). VT is not just Michael Vick or the tragedy (although frankly the colors are horrible and the mascot is a giant turkey, but then again UVA's and W&M's colors and mascots are not great either).
In any event, the presence of UVA, W&M and VT, as well stronger 2nd tier schools such as JMU, VCU and GMU, make VA a much stronger location for public universities. We chose VA over MD because of this: MD has UMCP, but there is no technical school, W&M is much stronger than SMC, and would anyone really compare the MD 2nd tier schools of Towson, UMBC, Salisbury as being comparable to the VA 2nd tier schools?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It is the 2nd oldest college in the country. It is nationally known. Jen Psaki went there. It’s a great school. I really wouldn’t worry about it too much.
Also, it’s a bargain if you’re in state.
Jen who?
Anonymous wrote:It is the 2nd oldest college in the country. It is nationally known. Jen Psaki went there. It’s a great school. I really wouldn’t worry about it too much.
Also, it’s a bargain if you’re in state.