Do you think that little of Texas A&M?
No. But I think very highly of Auburn.
No. But I think very highly of Auburn.
Uhh, no they're not. Many are from the suburbs around the major cities and are pretty red. Yeah, that kid from Houston? Probably from Katy or The Woodlands.SEC 2012 said:
The reality is Texas is more similar to California than the SEC west. Most students are from the major metro areas (Houston, Austin/SA, Dallas) which are urban and liberal. Ever major Texas city is democratic and unfortunately the whole state will soon be blue. I don't see a cultural clash in the PAC 12.
SEC 2012 said:
The reality is the state Texas is more similar to California than the SEC west. Most A&M students are from the major metro areas (Houston, Austin/SA, Dallas) which are urban and liberal. Every major Texas city is democratic and unfortunately the whole state will soon be blue. I don't see a cultural clash in the PAC 12. I also think A&M is quite a bit more liberal than Auburn, Ole Miss, etc. A lot of Beto fans on campus.
I disagree that Texas is closer to California than to the Southeast.SEC 2012 said:
The reality is thestate TexasAustin is more similar to California than the SEC west. Most A&M students are from the major metro areas (Houston, Austin/SA, Dallas) which are urban and liberal. Every major Texas city is democratic and unfortunately the whole state will soon be blue. I don't see a cultural clash in the PAC 12. I also think A&M is quite a bit more liberal than Auburn, Ole Miss, etc. A lot of Beto fans on campus.
SEC 2012 said:
The reality is the state Texas is more similar to California than the SEC west. Most A&M students are from the major metro areas (Houston, Austin/SA, Dallas) which are urban and liberal. Every major Texas city is democratic and unfortunately the whole state will soon be blue. I don't see a cultural clash in the PAC 12. I also think A&M is quite a bit more liberal than Auburn, Ole Miss, etc. A lot of Beto fans on campus.
SEC 2012 said:
The reality is the state Texas is more similar to California than the SEC west. Most A&M students are from the major metro areas (Houston, Austin/SA, Dallas) which are urban and liberal. Every major Texas city is democratic and unfortunately the whole state will soon be blue. I don't see a cultural clash in the PAC 12. I also think A&M is quite a bit more liberal than Auburn, Ole Miss, etc. A lot of Beto fans on campus.
rsf0626 said:
I would say A&M and Virginia Tech are twins...ranked almost exactly the same academically, both engineering schools, land grant schools, corp of cadets, full of traditions. Couldnt be more alike
SEC 2012 said:
A&M has more in common with UCLA than LSU. My goodness LSU is a community college with a football program. UCLA is a world class university.
ArticleQuote:
When you are recruiting first-generation students, and in particular blacks and Hispanics, you are also recruiting their families," said Christine Stanley, A&M's vice president for diversity.
A&M has also stepped up its financial aid. It created a new scholarship for low-income, first generation students. It now offers additional aid to National Hispanic Scholars and recipients of the National Achievement Scholarships, which are awarded to black students. And it expanded its Century Scholars Program, which was created in 1996 to recruit students from 40 specific minority-majority schools in Dallas and Houston. Now, the program has been expanded to more than 100 schools and has increased its annual recipients from fewer than 50 students per year to about 400.
I agree with 4. Auburn may not be ranked as high academically but they have great people at that school, as we do. They also have some very successful graduates, such as Tim Cook. And culturally, they are almost identical to us. They are like A&M was back in the 1970s. We were not ranked as highly academically as we are now, but from the 1950s forward we have produced some outstanding and highly, highly successful graduates. Very similar to what Auburn has done the last 20 to 30 years.4 said:
Spend some time on campus at Auburn and get back to me. Anyone that knows the 2 schools will tell you they are extremely similar.
And academically, yes, they are a very good school. Endowments don't tell you the quality of the education. We are over twice their size and have access to the PUF and a lot of oil money. Of course our endowment is bigger. It's also bigger than some ivy league schools. The education at those schools is generally considered pretty good.
I think that might be wishful thinking on your part.Quote:
unfortunately the whole state will soon be blue.
This ain't it chief.SEC 2012 said:
The reality is the state Texas is more similar to California than the SEC west. Most A&M students are from the major metro areas (Houston, Austin/SA, Dallas) which are urban and liberal. Every major Texas city is democratic and unfortunately the whole state will soon be blue. I don't see a cultural clash in the PAC 12. I also think A&M is quite a bit more liberal than Auburn, Ole Miss, etc. A lot of Beto fans on campus.
Here in my little neck of Cinco Ranch (Katy), I have a t-sip, a Red Raider, two families of Swamp Kitties, a Pittsburgh grad, an OU family, and I believe a family with ties to the northeast, perhaps Boston U, in addition to the two Aggie families on my street. In my overall neighborhood, I've seen three Alabama yard signs, one UT, some pig people, several more Swamp Kitties, several more t-sips (one of which the dad went to UK/grad in Austin, the mom went to the Naval Academy, the oldest is currently at A&M, the middle child is about to start at Texas State, and the youngest is just starting high school but loves her dad's burned orange stuff). Of course we're going to have a lot of Big 12 types, being in Texas, but I'm not seeing any Jayhawks or Wildcats around here.Quote:
Just look at where your friends and neighbors went to school
McInnis80 said:
Of the schools TAMU Lists as peer institutions, only 1 is in the SEC, Florida. Four of the schools are University of California systems schools, seven are Big 10 schools.
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A&M and Auburn were separated at birth. Couldn't be two schools more alike.
TAMU bball fan said:
Texas A&M is probably not as suburban and conservative as some of you remember. Today the student body is roughly 50% white and nearly 25% hispanic. Only point being that's it's a much more diverse university than it was only a few years ago, mostly due to Sharp and Young's efforts to recruit inner city schools as described below to fulfill A&M's land grant mission.ArticleQuote:
When you are recruiting first-generation students, and in particular blacks and Hispanics, you are also recruiting their families," said Christine Stanley, A&M's vice president for diversity.
A&M has also stepped up its financial aid. It created a new scholarship for low-income, first generation students. It now offers additional aid to National Hispanic Scholars and recipients of the National Achievement Scholarships, which are awarded to black students. And it expanded its Century Scholars Program, which was created in 1996 to recruit students from 40 specific minority-majority schools in Dallas and Houston. Now, the program has been expanded to more than 100 schools and has increased its annual recipients from fewer than 50 students per year to about 400.