Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I have a kid there. It's a fantastic university. Your kid would figure it out. It's a big school. Large university. Maybe your kid needs a tiny liberal arts college? Fine. But VT is a great school and students there find their tribe. What I love about the school is that the students are incredibly smart, but are down to earth. It also has the corps of cadets, which lends an air of discipline to the campus. When you have students in uniform in your 9 a.m. class, it tends to raise things a notch.
Bahahaha. It’s a huge football school with a large tailgate vibe mixed with stoner mentality. Same shenanigans as every other school.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I have a kid there. It's a fantastic university. Your kid would figure it out. It's a big school. Large university. Maybe your kid needs a tiny liberal arts college? Fine. But VT is a great school and students there find their tribe. What I love about the school is that the students are incredibly smart, but are down to earth. It also has the corps of cadets, which lends an air of discipline to the campus. When you have students in uniform in your 9 a.m. class, it tends to raise things a notch.
Bahahaha. It’s a huge football school with a large tailgate vibe mixed with stoner mentality. Same shenanigans as every other school.
Anonymous wrote:I have a kid there. It's a fantastic university. Your kid would figure it out. It's a big school. Large university. Maybe your kid needs a tiny liberal arts college? Fine. But VT is a great school and students there find their tribe. What I love about the school is that the students are incredibly smart, but are down to earth. It also has the corps of cadets, which lends an air of discipline to the campus. When you have students in uniform in your 9 a.m. class, it tends to raise things a notch.
Anonymous wrote:Okay enough about parking. Back to OP - it really is about finding a group. When I look back at my VT experience, the two groups that I keep up with 30 years later are my small engineering major and a religious group that I was involved in.
I really didn’t hit my stride until halfway through my spring semester freshman year. It takes a while to discover who you are and find others who you mesh with.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Part of the problem is the set up: pull into the vast suburban mall type parking lot and then follow a sidewalk for a barren 20 minutes to get to a standalone rather boring admin building. My kids kept on their list because everyone they know who goes there loves it. But my kids found other better fit colleges.
Serious question: what on earth are you talking about? Are you just making things up? I've been to VT many times and never experienced the "set up" you describe.
NP here. I know what they’re describing and I agree. The center where they give tours is far from everything and surrounded by a massive parking lot. It takes quite awhile to walk to campus. So first impressions aren’t great for some, that’s all.
That must have been the overflow parking lot. We parked in the Perry Street parking garage and it was a couple minutes walk from there to the Burruss Hall building where the open house started; along the way we encountered several groups of students welcoming us and pointing us in the right direction -- they were all enthusiastic and energetic, even on a chilly early March morning!
Anonymous wrote:Part of the problem is the set up: pull into the vast suburban mall type parking lot and then follow a sidewalk for a barren 20 minutes to get to a standalone rather boring admin building. My kids kept on their list because everyone they know who goes there loves it. But my kids found other better fit colleges.