UCLA and Cal are admitting weaker students these days. |
The UCs are test blind. Most of the arguments flow from there. |
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To be fair, most publics are still test optional so even those that report scores, it's not across all applicants.
UF, UT, UGA, and Purdue require test scores for all applicants, so comparing them to other publics, such as UNC, UVA and Michigan, will likely show them as "weaker". |
Isn't paying OOS for any public paying for more than the oos public is worth. People want to go to Michigan oos. Why? When they can easily go to their WI flagship and still be many hours away from parents if distance from home is a factor. |
That's exactly what is being disputed here |
UT's CDS doesn't release the numbers, though, so who can really say on that one |
Source? |
They tend to support Gavin Newsom. |
One can actually afford housing in Richmond, Charlotte, and Dallas. And there are plenty of job opportunities in all three states. |
| The admission rate comparison isn't a good way to judge because not all applications processes are the same. I love the UCs and my kid may end up there for grad school. Their acceptance rates are pushed down b/c of the application process, basically being one and done for a number of schools. It's not that unlike schools that don't require an essay. Schools that have dropped essays have seen an increase in number of apps and a related drop in acceptance rates. Who is going to write a WI or MI essay just to toss their hat in the ring? Schools with longer essays or numerous questions (hi, Stanford) are going to have a more self-selecting group of applicants b/c they are willing to not only pay the fee, but put in the extra work on the application. |
Unlike the UC schools, other publics have affordable student housing, non-overcrowded classes, and easy class registration that won’t extend college beyond the normal timeline or severely limit your class options. Also overly relying on TAs instead of professors is a huge issue. Michigan is worth out of state tuition, among many others. The student experience and education provided are much better. The UC schools are only worth in-state tuition. It is like getting your college degree from Costco. |
How so? |
Classes are enormous with so many students like a warehouse. FIghting the crowds and long lines to enroll in classes with are often full. Classes are just budget items so not getting much from the professors but mainly just the TAs. Afterwards you tell yourself it was all worth it because you got a deal (low in-state tuition). |
True at all 8 of them? |
Yes. |