People in Baltimore say this a lot on this board, but I just visited JHU (drove up from D.C.) and the area we drove through to get to JHU had several police cars, a fair amount of graffiti, and was generally very run-down looking. So, clearly, that's not in the same area you live, but it did not leave a good impression even though the campus itself was beautiful. Another point that I noticed was one of the dorms has an actual security office planted right at the entrance, which while reassuring also begs the question of why that is needed. Overall, I was just surprised at the contrasts I saw between the nice campus and the not so nice area near campus. It think Princeton/Newark also gave me that kind of whiplash. |
Oh if you saw police cars and graffiti, then never mind, it must have been terrifying
But strange to see a beautiful and visibly secure campus and think that is somehow indicative of a problem |
Every year the Chicago admissions dean makes the admitted % number public. Since 2021, at the welcome conference call for admitted students and their families in February, the ED/EA rate has been well below 10%. Not certain why someone keeps saying 40% without any source for the assertion, but that is false. |
And on restaurants - Virtue is the best. But the kids like Seoul Taco to grab an inexpensive lunch. |
I don't understand why you don't understand the math. The freshman class is about 1,600. The reported yield is an astounding 88%, well above Harvard and MIT, meaning at least 75% of enrolled students were likely locked in through Early Decision (possibly higher but let's just say 75%). So it's fair to assume 1,200 students are admitted via ED. Now, you do have to make assumptions about the number of Chicago ED applicants, which surprise surprise is not reported on their CDS. Northwestern gets 5K ED applicants. JHU gets 7k. I would personally be surprised if Chicago comes near those #'s given its reputation for quirkiness, weird essays, etc, but let's say they get 5k in total (ED1/ED2). That's a 25% admit rate, which probably breaks down into 30% ED1 and 20% ED2. So yes, 40% may be an exaggeration, but depending how many ED applicants they actually get, might not be. One thing is for sure, there's no way it's below 10%. Hope this helps. |
There is a better calculation that determines the ED acceptance rate to be 40%. But either way, we use math to derive the answer. The ones don’t know how to do math will have to listen to the sub-10% EA/ED combined acceptance rate offered by Chicago AO. I am surprised that there are many. |