It's where Michelle Bachman went to school if that helps! Jerry Falwell started it if you remember him.
Thanks for the reply. The more I researched last night the more I liked the school. Of course, it will depend upon daughter's liking. University of Virginia has shown interest in her to play ball so we will be heading up there soon. Plan to swing through and speak with Liberty also. Seems to me it would be a perfect fit. Especially if they would look at her to play ball also.Actually Michelle Bachman got her JD from ORU but we would not want facts to get in the way of a good rant. Dig in and fling another booger Jimmy.
Jerry Falwell Sr. did in fact start Liberty University and I knew him personally and professionally. His word was gold and his vision was one in a million. I remember the day he drove through the tunnel under US460 that connects Campus East to Main Campus. Huge milestone in the Universities development. My first trip as a private pilot was to his funeral in May of 2007.
To the OP
The school has grown at an alarming pace over the past 10 years. Student life is very robust and varied.
I just looked looked up General Young and see he is no longer the Dean to the School of Aeronautics but Assistant Provost. The Aeronautics School has grown 10 fold under his leadership and has a top notch facility there at KLYH.
As I started in my first post, I recommend getting your family to a College for a Weekend event. Here is the 2015-2016 schedule.
http://www.liberty.edu/undergrad/?PID=16415
All I know is that it is ran by whacko evangelicals.
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Thanks for the reply. The more I researched last night the more I liked the school. Of course, it will depend upon daughter's liking. University of Virginia has shown interest in her to play ball so we will be heading up there soon. Plan to swing through and speak with Liberty also. Seems to me it would be a perfect fit. Especially if they would look at her to play ball also.
Have any advice on UVA's aviation programs? They seem more geared towards the business management side of aviation from what I see. Which she is wanting that also.
Some employers will send resumes with Liberty on them directly to the roundfile.
Take this for what it's worth though. After all, I myself am an ORU grad.
Does Virginia (U of ) have an undergraduate aviation program? I think the Darden School (Virgina's business admin grad school) has a graduate aviation management program but you gotta get there first.Have any advice on UVA's aviation programs? They seem more geared towards the business management side of aviation from what I see. Which she is wanting that also.
And the ones who do that, you probably don't want to work for anyway because they make unfounded assumptions without having the facts. I'd call that a good thing.
I can't imagine there even being a discussion if her options were UVA or Liberty. UVA is a top-tier school with nationwide reach and recognition. Liberty is, well, Liberty. If their particular brand of whatever-you-want-to-call it is your thing, that's great, but from a long-term, career-focused perspective, I wouldn't want that name on my resume. Objectively, Liberty does not have a reputation as a legitimate educational institution. Sure, you'll find some people who think it's great, but I suspect you'll find a much larger group that think it's run by, as another poster said, evangelical wackjobs. This is especially important if your daughter has any desire to go into a field where people care about what school you went to (right or wrong, it does matter in a number of fields).
I can't imagine there even being a discussion if her options were UVA or Liberty. UVA is a top-tier school with nationwide reach and recognition. Liberty is, well, Liberty. If their particular brand of whatever-you-want-to-call it is your thing, that's great, but from a long-term, career-focused perspective, I wouldn't want that name on my resume. Objectively, Liberty does not have a reputation as a legitimate educational institution. Sure, you'll find some people who think it's great, but I suspect you'll find a much larger group that think it's run by, as another poster said, evangelical wackjobs. This is especially important if your daughter has any desire to go into a field where people care about what school you went to (right or wrong, it does matter in a number of fields).
wikipedia said:Liberty was founded in 1971 and received Southern Association of Colleges and Schools (SACS) accreditation in 1980,[56] which was most recently reaffirmed in 2006.[57] In addition, it was accredited by the Transnational Association of Christian Colleges and Schools (TRACS) in September 1984, but resigned its TRACS accreditation on November 6, 2008.[58][59] Liberty has 60 accredited degree granting programs.[60] The law school, which opened in August 2004, gained provisional accreditation from the American Bar Association in 2006 and was granted full accreditation in 2010.[61] On December 9, 2009, Chancellor Jerry Falwell Jr. announced that "Liberty University has received Level VI accreditation from the Southern Association of Colleges and Schools (SACS). This is the highest classification from SACS and is reserved for colleges and universities that offer four or more doctoral degrees.[62] Liberty is also accredited by: American Bar Association (ABA) [63] Accreditation Board for Engineering and Technology (ABET)[63] National Council for Accreditation of Teacher Education (NCATE)[63] Commission on Collegiate Nursing Education (CCNE)[63] Aviation Accreditation Board International (AABI) [64] National Association of Schools of Music (NASM) [65] Commission on Accreditation of Athletic Training Education (CAATE),[63] Accreditation of Allied Health Education Programs (CAAHEP).[63]
WOW! What uninformed drivel.
I didn't say it was unaccredited, I said it doesn't have a "reputation" as a legitimate educational institution. The perception that it's run my evangelical wackjobs contributes to that perception.
where you get your undergrad education matters very little after some number of years.
Well.....Riddle has a reputation like that too....
That's true And if you want to do anything other than fly airplanes, a Riddle degree isn't going to help all that much. Of course, the Riddle degree isn't going to actually hurt a resume like having Liberty University on it probably will.
Come on, regardless of your personal beliefs, this kind of comment is really unnecessary.
I didn't say it was unaccredited, I said it doesn't have a "reputation" as a legitimate educational institution. The perception that it's run my evangelical wackjobs contributes to that perception.
Well.....Riddle has a reputation like that too....
Sort of like Notre Dame and those Catholic whack jobs?
Objectively, Liberty does not have a reputation as a legitimate educational institution.
Anyone who believes that Liberty is not a legitimate educational institution is not objective - they are bigoted because of the Southern Baptist orientation of the school.
I have experience with one of their graduates - one of the sharpest, energetic and most driven people I've met. That's a data point of one, but I tend toward a favorable view of those who graduate.
ETA; you may want to look at Auburn University, they have a softball team that made it to the semi-finals in the World Series and a growing Aviation Management program. Just a thought.
There are plenty of religiously-affiliated schools out there that manage to educate students in an objective manner that doesn't put religion first and foremost; Liberty isn't one of those schools. If you're looking for a school that puts religion first and education second, that's your prerogative, but just accept it for what it is and don't try to pretend like it's on the same footing as a real university.
What does scare me is the liberal immoral agenda being pushed upon our young and destroying our country.
I don't think it is. Take out the 'wacko' part and it is a much fairer comment. The Evangelical Christian bent is very much a part of what makes Liberty U what it is. If I'd never heard of it, I'd want to know what the defining characteristic was of the school before sending my kid. There are some folks out there that wouldn't want their kid within 100 miles of this school.
But it frequently matters early in your career, which is when getting your foot in the door can be the hardest. I sure wouldn't want to make it any harder on myself than I need to by going to a school like Liberty. Like it or not, lots of people are going to dismiss places like Liberty out of hand. Whether that's right or wrong is somewhat irrelevant, but it doesn't make it any less of a reality.