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I don't have an issue with a fellow Virginia resident from southwest VA getting selected over a candidate from a VA DC suburb. I do believe that William and Mary and UVa take too many out-of-staters as a percentage of the overall student body. North Carolina public schools have a max of 18% OOS students. This is mandated by the state legislature. W&M and UVa each have about 1/3 of the student population as OOS.
Arlington and Fairfax County schools as well as the City of Falls Church, and to a lesser extent, the city of Alexandria do push AP and IB courses. Cynics say this push is solely to improve the school's ranking in the Newsweek Challenge Index. My D took 8 over her hs career. At least five of my friends' kids took 11. I think the average number of APs taken at my D's school stood at about 3 or 4. Honors classes are taught in the lower grades but 11th grade English is either regular track or AP English Language followed by AP English Literature in 12th. There are students in the AP/IB courses who really don't belong in AP or regular college prep but there is no in-between honors. |
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Only 30% in-state? Ridiculous! If I were a state taxpayer in VA, I'd be pissed.
I hope they at least don't give the out-of-staters all the grant aid. |
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thanx..i love georgia! :) ..this summer im going to my cousin's house and she lives in atlanta so im going to see if she can take me to some campuses while im there...what did you like about gt? |
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My HS had honors, AP, and IB. I think the maximum number of AP courses was about 5. AP is funny because most of the super-selective private schools don't even take the credits. I was offered a year for IB, but didn't take it because I wanted to study abroad. I absolutely would not commit to a school just because of a specific major. |
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Munchkin is absolutely correct. Tier 1 schools are very restrictive in which AP/IBs they'll accept as incoming credits, yet the adcoms expect to see these couses on an applicant's transcript. |
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What is sad that years eariler, State Colleges were open to all in state students, but not now. In State Tuition was cheaper than out of State students. Now it is becoming so cost prohibitive that unless some get Grants or scholorships they cannot afford to attend. GPA is become coming more important.
Private schools seem from what I have seen will give many more Scholarships for more money. I wondered about this and just figure that if they do not, they will close for lack of Students. Ergo, many Female/Male Schools are opening to either sex or close. So, if you do not get a grant or a scholarship, you will not gain access to schools of secondary learning! So, you go to tech schools and learn to be a plumber, mechanic, electrician. What is funny, most of them make more damn money!:D |
[QUOTE=PhoenixAzul;1396727]When I applied, I applied to a really bipolar group of schools, and was accepted into all of them. I applied to :
Penn State main St. Bonaventure Ball State Bethany College (WV) Otterbein College University of Alabama (yeah, I know) University of Pittsburgh I visited Ball State and St. Bonaventure...both were WAYYY too big for me, and had to have a big emphasis on partying...not what I was looking for. Plus, Ball State's representatives were rather rude to me when I did my visit. QUOTE] St. Bonaventure in upstate NY? My dad went there.. doesn't it only have about 1500 students? |
I was accepted at:
-Miami (OH) -UVA -William & Mary -Butler I really did like UVA, but I knew as soon as I visited that I belonged at Miami. |
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