First is the raw number; then adjusted for percentage of enrolled freshmen to account for undergraduate size. Some schools like Alabama and ASU offer full scholarships to winners so you will see a large number at these institutions.
1. Alabama 323 [8,279 Freshmen, 3.9%] 2. Florida 297 [6,612 Freshmen 4.4%] 3. USC 262 [3,402 Freshmen, 7.7%] 4. Purdue 260 [9,353 Freshmen, 2.7%] 5. UT Dallas 232 [4,218 Freshmen, 5.5%] 6. Texas A&M 219 [12,419 Freshmen, 1.7%] 7. Vanderbilt 185 [1,624 Freshmen, 11.3%] 8. Harvard 160 [1,644 Freshmen, 9.7%] 9. MIT 154 [1,136 Freshmen, 13.5%] 10. Penn 147 [2,415 Freshmen, 6%] 11. UMD 144 [5,821 Freshmen, 2.5%] 12. Stanford 129 [1,733 Freshmen, 7.4%] 13. Yale 127 [1,554 Freshmen, 8%] 14. Princeton 116 [1,497 Freshmen, 7.7%] 15. Northeastern 97 [2,519 Freshmen, 3.9%] 16. Duke 94 [1,744 Freshmen, 5.3%] 17. UC Berkeley 93 [6,707 Freshmen, 1.4%] 18. Georgia Tech 90 [3,646 Freshmen, 2.5%] 19. UCF 85 [7,512 Freshmen, 1.1%] 20. UT Austin 85 [9,109 Freshmen, .9%] 21. Oklahoma 84 22. Minnesota 79 23. BU 77 [3,635 Freshmen, 2.1%] 24. UCLA 77 [6,461 Freshmen, 1.2%] 25. USF 77 [6,773 Freshmen, 1.1%] 26. Michigan 76 [7,050 Freshmen, 1%] 27. Columbia 75 [1,522 Freshmen, 4.9%] 28. Northwestern 75 [2,038 Freshmen, 3.7%] 29. Brown 69 [1,717 Freshmen, 4%] 30. Emory 67 [1,424 Freshmen, 4.7%] 31. Indiana 67 [9,736 Freshmen, .7%] 32. Arizona 65 [9,069 Freshmen, .7%] 33. Tufts 63 [1,694 Freshmen, 3.7%] 34. ASU 62 [10,022 Freshmen, .6%] 35. Georgia 60 [6,250 Freshmen, 1%] 36. BYU 59 [5,567 Freshmen, 1%] 37. Georgetown 56 [1,603 Freshmen, 3.5%] 38. Case Western 55 [1,553 Freshmen, 3.5%] 39. Cornell 54 [3,491 Freshmen, 1.5%] 40. Rice 51 [1,201 Freshmen, 4.3%] 41. Dartmouth 49 [1,124 Freshmen, 4.4%] 42. Michigan State 49 [9,829 Freshmen .5%] 43. Johns Hopkins 48 [1,406 Freshmen 3.4%] 44. UChicago 48 [2,053 Freshmen, 2.3%] 45. Carnegie Mellon 47 [1,716 Freshmen, 2.7%] 46. Clemson 45 [4,588 Freshmen, .99%] 47. Missouri 45 [4,983 Freshmen, .9%] 48. NYU 44 [6,184 Freshmen, .7%] 49. Miss State 43 [3,367 Freshmen, 1.2%] 50. Rutgers 43 [7,780 Freshmen, .5%] 51. UNC 40 [4,689 Freshmen, .8%] 52. Illinois 39 [8,297 Freshmen, .5%] 53. Oklahoma State 36 [4,643 Freshmen, .7%] 54. Iowa State 35 55. UVA 35 [4,020 Freshmen, .9%] 1. |
35 at UVA seems low. |
Winners or finalists here? |
Some states have considerably lower criteria for NMS -- VA, MD, DC always have very high bars--within the top 5. |
Are these kids that actually received scholarships or simply recognized as NMSF/NMF? |
Winners chosen from the finalists. |
https://www.nationalmerit.org/s/1758/images/gid2/editor_documents/annual_report.pdf?gid=2&pgid=61&sessionid=d3a8ffd3-af35-4933-8b90-e70b49d2fb0c&cc=1 |
So if states have different thresholds for determining NMSFs, what does the data showing the number of NMSFs enrolled at a college or university really mean? |
Now do a list based on percentage of enrolled freshmen to account for undergraduate size. Then your smaller elite colleges will show up. |
In other words, its nice to have, but determinative of nothing. |
Did you not read the OP or see the % listed? |
+1 This. |
It does. And it pretty much shows what we expect it to show. The "better" colleges have more winners as a percentage of the undergrad enrollment. |
Not much |
Wow that means those 50 colleges got 65% of the winners. When you factor in the top LAC students, it pretty much supports the idea that top stats students get into a top college or get big merit aid (Alabama, etc.) despite the rhetoric you hear otherwise. |