Anonymous wrote:No dog in the fight either, as neither a student, alumni, or parent of , I can tell you (as a recruiter for a DC-headquartered large company) our recruiting staff looks at JMU as being significantly "higher" on the totem-pole of state schools than GMU. You are correct though, we do see a rising trend of international students coming out of GMU. (Most having hard-sciences degrees.)
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Can you share any real life current info about your kids' experiences at Virginia colleges, not UVA, W&M, VATech or JMU? Through the years I've just never gotten any sense of the other Virginia colleges and I'm curious to hear about them. With rising junior B/G twins, I know we'll be taking the tours this year. Thanks.
I would put JMU bellow GMU.
GMU 51.7% accepted
JMU 59.9% accepted
http://colleges.usnews.rankingsandreviews.com/best-colleges/george-mason-university-3749
http://colleges.usnews.rankingsandreviews.com/best-colleges/jmu-3721
You're dreaming. % acceptance rate does not equate to "harder to get in." You would have to include the amount of applicants, which is information that is not provided.
If a school has 100 students, but only 100 students happened to apply, then it has a 100% acceptance rate. Does that mean it's a worse school? Of course not, it just means that it had fewer applicants.
Everyone and their brother applies to GMU (since it is a lot of people's "Safety School"). With all of those applicants, they have to say "no" to more people. That does not make it a "Better" school.
GMU is a factory with 1000s of applicants. I did 2 years at GMU and then tranferred to JMU. GMU is essentially a good community college.
Anonymous wrote:
+1 I always thought of GMU as a large community college. Nothing wrong with that, but that's exactly what it is. It's a great way to save $$, living at home and only paying tuition. We have a few neighbor DCs that have completed two years at GMU and then transferred to VT / JMU / UVA for the last two years.
Anonymous wrote:Thanks VCU and CNU pps!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Can you share any real life current info about your kids' experiences at Virginia colleges, not UVA, W&M, VATech or JMU? Through the years I've just never gotten any sense of the other Virginia colleges and I'm curious to hear about them. With rising junior B/G twins, I know we'll be taking the tours this year. Thanks.
I would put JMU bellow GMU.
GMU 51.7% accepted
JMU 59.9% accepted
http://colleges.usnews.rankingsandreviews.com/best-colleges/george-mason-university-3749
http://colleges.usnews.rankingsandreviews.com/best-colleges/jmu-3721
You're dreaming. % acceptance rate does not equate to "harder to get in." You would have to include the amount of applicants, which is information that is not provided.
If a school has 100 students, but only 100 students happened to apply, then it has a 100% acceptance rate. Does that mean it's a worse school? Of course not, it just means that it had fewer applicants.
Everyone and their brother applies to GMU (since it is a lot of people's "Safety School"). With all of those applicants, they have to say "no" to more people. That does not make it a "Better" school.
GMU is a factory with 1000s of applicants. I did 2 years at GMU and then tranferred to JMU. GMU is essentially a good community college.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Can you share any real life current info about your kids' experiences at Virginia colleges, not UVA, W&M, VATech or JMU? Through the years I've just never gotten any sense of the other Virginia colleges and I'm curious to hear about them. With rising junior B/G twins, I know we'll be taking the tours this year. Thanks.
I would put JMU bellow GMU.
GMU 51.7% accepted
JMU 59.9% accepted
http://colleges.usnews.rankingsandreviews.com/best-colleges/george-mason-university-3749
http://colleges.usnews.rankingsandreviews.com/best-colleges/jmu-3721
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Very surprised not to see any substantive mention of VCU. I didn't go to VCU, but I know a number of grads, ranging over the last 20 years, and I've been there any number of times. Thirty-plus years ago, not too many people had heard of VCU; it's a merger of two previously-unrelated state schools and a public medical school. They've really stuck to the institution-building down there. It's quite astoundingly cosmopolitan; the city-feel permeates everything. They've really expanded undergrad housing, both quality and quantity; in just about 12-15 years, it's become very predominantly residential among the F/T undergrads. The academic rankings in several key areas have soared, you can do an actual liberal arts major with a business or ed minor (which is apparently the key undergrad goal now) and the graduate programs are highly recognized by the specialists. At one point in the last few years, VCU's city campus was viewed as a bit dicey in terms of safety, but I understand that VCU has very aggressively addressed this.
I post this not because I have any VCU affiliation (like I said, I don't, at all), but because I'm so surprised to hear VCU mentioned more by colleagues, friends, friends with HS soph-through-senior kids -- almost everybody -- than I hear VCU mentioned by people around here. I appreciate the snob factor, and I've been accused of perpetuating it myself. But I think VCU seems to be beginning to pass the snob test.
I think VCU is the largest consolidated, single undergrad school in the state. Any other comments out there? It would be a useful reality check for me, as well as responsive to the OP.
Thanks -
I travel to Richmond occasionally and definitely get the sense that the university has expanded. The fact that it's located in what used to be an "iffy" part of Richmond between a nice residential district and downtown probably made it easier for the university to acquire properties and build in the area. A lot of kids in Fairfax schools view VCU as a safety school, but the kids that end up going there are a fairly decent mix of kids who'll do quite well and others who'll party too hard and never graduate. Very strong reputation in the graphic arts, too, so it has a hipster vibe that you won't find at any other school in the state. Like CNU, it gets mentioned more often because JMU and GMU have become more selective.
Anonymous wrote:Very surprised not to see any substantive mention of VCU. I didn't go to VCU, but I know a number of grads, ranging over the last 20 years, and I've been there any number of times. Thirty-plus years ago, not too many people had heard of VCU; it's a merger of two previously-unrelated state schools and a public medical school. They've really stuck to the institution-building down there. It's quite astoundingly cosmopolitan; the city-feel permeates everything. They've really expanded undergrad housing, both quality and quantity; in just about 12-15 years, it's become very predominantly residential among the F/T undergrads. The academic rankings in several key areas have soared, you can do an actual liberal arts major with a business or ed minor (which is apparently the key undergrad goal now) and the graduate programs are highly recognized by the specialists. At one point in the last few years, VCU's city campus was viewed as a bit dicey in terms of safety, but I understand that VCU has very aggressively addressed this.
I post this not because I have any VCU affiliation (like I said, I don't, at all), but because I'm so surprised to hear VCU mentioned more by colleagues, friends, friends with HS soph-through-senior kids -- almost everybody -- than I hear VCU mentioned by people around here. I appreciate the snob factor, and I've been accused of perpetuating it myself. But I think VCU seems to be beginning to pass the snob test.
I think VCU is the largest consolidated, single undergrad school in the state. Any other comments out there? It would be a useful reality check for me, as well as responsive to the OP.
Thanks -