ScionOfSouthland
Dodd-Like
- Joined
- Nov 29, 2009
- Messages
- 34,789
After your first job no one cares
Follow along with the video below to see how to install our site as a web app on your home screen.
Note: This feature may not be available in some browsers.
Would trade a lower team GPA for a victory over ugag any day.
Texas having a low team GPA is whatever. Publicizing it as some sort of accomplishment isn't very smart, though.
So would it be smart to publicize a much better team GPA?
Or would a vast majority of College Football Fans say that is not what they pay thousands of $ to see / hear about on Saturdays?
It's dumb to draw attention to something that doesn't make your program look good. Boasting about a 2.89 team GPA is not a good look. It's pretty hard to argue
It's dumb to draw attention to something that doesn't make your program look good. Boasting about a 2.89 team GPA is not a good look. It's pretty hard to argue otherwise. That's entirely separate from your second question, as there is no mandate that they tweet out stupid things. The reason Texas is getting ridiculed for the tweet, including by many of their own fans, has nothing to do with team performance on the field.
If we beat UGA and then someone tweeted from the Tech football account "We beat UGA and only had to lower the team GPA by 0.16 points!" it would be a dumb tweet.
Any data out there on historical GT trend? I got out in the early 90s and those numbers sound way higher than I recall.GT boasts a Greek GPA of 3.44 and an all undergraduate GPA of 3.35 FWIW, for those of us who are old school those numbers are eye popping. It is typical of what I see in resumes from GT these days. If I saw a resume with a 2.89 you would not have my respect based on that alone unless there were other known factors regardless of what your major is. If it was a 2.89 from GT in the 1980's or earlier I wouldn't have much of a problem with it.
http://greek.gatech.edu/ (it is in one of the banners that pops up)
Well, Duh. 3.40 was honors and now it is below average.Any data out there on historical GT trend? I got out in the early 90s and those numbers sound way higher than I recall.
I was sub 3.0. Didn’t even know there was an “honors”.Well, Duh. 3.40 was honors and now it is below average.
If we stop being nerds, we cease to be Georgia Tech.Would trade a lower team GPA for a victory over ugag any day.
It was not great.As compared to tweeting out how great it is to make a bowl game in Detroit.
Although I'm sure its gone up some due to grade inflation, I would guess having a larger percentage of women and larger percentage of students in easier majors are significant factors as well.GT boasts a Greek GPA of 3.44 and an all undergraduate GPA of 3.35 FWIW, for those of us who are old school those numbers are eye popping. It is typical of what I see in resumes from GT these days. If I saw a resume with a 2.89 you would not have my respect based on that alone unless there were other known factors regardless of what your major is. If it was a 2.89 from GT in the 1980's or earlier I wouldn't have much of a problem with it.
http://greek.gatech.edu/ (it is in one of the banners that pops up)
Although I'm sure its gone up some due to grade inflation, I would guess having a larger percentage of women and larger percentage of students in easier majors are significant factors as well.
With 97.0% of students staying on for a second year, Georgia Institute of Technology - Main Campus is one of the best in the country when it comes to freshman retention.
At Georgia Tech, there were 3,045 bachelors degree candidates in the class of 2013. By 2015, six years after beginning their degree, 82.3% of these students had graduated. After an additional two years, 84.4% of this class eventually completed their degree.
Difference is I'd probably never even get in now being a white male from a Georgia high schoolThe biggest factor is the mindset of the Georgia Tech and other schools has changed. Georgia Tech used to have a survival of the fittest mindset and took pride in being extremely hard to get through. Sometime after 1995 or so the school discovered that the washout rate was negatively impacting the academic ranking with US News and other ranking sites and drastically changed course.
Remember "Look at the person on your left and on your right, one of you won't be here next year"; well that era is long gone.
I would bet the percentage of students who actually flunk out of Georgia Tech is in the single digits now, if not less than 1%. People leave for a variety of reasons (costs, personal situations, etc..); but I seriously doubt a major reason is grades.
https://www.collegefactual.com/coll...ampus/academic-life/graduation-and-retention/