I would also echo the prior poster who noted that there is a "through the looking glass" Queen of Hearts quality to this sort of criticism, given the parallel thread o' craziness in which people assert that "Big 3" counselors discriminatorily steer students away from applying to the same Ivies in order to protect spots for the rich and powerful. I'm sure the bottom line is nothing more and nothing less than a lot of kids and families looking at the Naviance statistics for Penn and realize they have a chance at what is a world-class university and an Ivy League school (for those who care about that particular distinction), so lots apply. |
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I went to a small high school and went to a huge university because it had a wide variety of strong majors available to my then undecided 18 year old mind. I suspect the kids at any of these schools will be more than well prepared for that kind of collegiate experience.
Not everyone wants a small, liberal arts college. |
Maybe they are too mature (or at least discreet) to play the game. |
Sidwell Friends is one of several independent schools that won't share its Naviance statistics directly with students and families. I believe that their view is that in a relatively small school, it would be too easy to identify specific students with the data. |
| Are you sure that is accurate about Sidwell and Naviance? I thought they do show it to the kids/families. |
| Sidwell does NOT show families Naviance. Anyway, any word on Princeton or Yale admits? Stanford? |
5 is the witching hour, I am told. |
Only for Yale. Princeton came out at 3pm yesterday and Stanford last week. |
Why don't they share this data? Seems it would remove a lot of the criticism of their college counselors. |
Rein it in! You sound desperate. |
Not desperate. Just curious. I don't have anyone applying this year. |
So only 1 at Stanford and none at Princeton? |
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Stanford was very tough this year - 7,297 applicants (up from 6,103 two years ago and 6,948 last year), and they admitted 10.2% (after admitting 11.9% in 2012 and 10.8% last year).
They are the "hot" school right now, for sure. Though Harvard also saw a big jump in Early Applications and a corresponding increase in selectivity. Princeton's apps were flat and its selectivity decreased a bit, Yale's were down a bit and I expect its selectivity to decrease a little as well. |
10.2% must be the percent of early admits? Because overall Stanford admits more like 6%. |
Yes, these are the early numbers. Last year, Stanford had an overall admit rate of 5.1% and an early decision admit rate of 10.8%. When you crunch the numbers, Stanford only admitted 3.9% of last year's regular decision applicants. The early decision admit rate is already down and those other figures will almost certainly be lower this year as well. |