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Take a look at this NY in-state school's four year matriculation.
Cannot be more real. Cornell (315 Admitted, 205 Enrolled) CalTech (6 Admitted, 2 Enrolled) Berkeley (23 Admitted, 6 Enrolled) Brown (37 Admitted, 23 Enrolled) CMU (73 Admitted, 37 Enrolled) Northwestern (42 Admitted, 22 Enrolled) University of Chicago (55 Admitted, 42 Enrolled) UCLA (20 Admitted, 6 Enrolled) Columbia (64 Admitted, 42 Enrolled) Dartmouth (14 Admitted, 7 Enrolled) Duke (25 Admitted, 11 Enrolled) Georgetown (43 Admitted, 17 Enrolled) Georgia Tech (69 Admitted, 3 Enrolled) Harvard (29 Admitted, 23 Enrolled) Johns Hopkins (23 Admitted, 5 Enrolled) MIT (39 Admitted, 36 Enrolled) UMich (342 Admitted, 141 Enrolled) University of Pennsylvania (57 Admitted, 37 Enrolled) Princeton (45 Admitted, 25 Enrolled) Stanford (9 Admitted, 6 Enrolled) Yale (39 Admitted, 23 Enrolled) |
| First, yes, half of Cornell’s colleges are state schools, so yea, the in-state preference is real, and second, what are those numbers supposed to be? |
I think someone is posting their own school’s Scoir or naviance data? For some reason? |
| Yes my DS went to Cornell as a transfer to Arts and Sciences after being rejected (he was waitlisted) from Cornell out of high school to a NY school at Cornell. Was explicitly told would have gotten admission had he been in state. |
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You’re private schools and state public schools on your list. Why are you doing that and what is your point?
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You’re *mixing* |
| Yes, the land grant schools within Cornell are considered public schools. If you are a resident of DC, your kid could use TAG money to pay tuition if they enroll in one of the “public” colleges at Cornell. |
| You cannot tell whether it is Cornell's preference for IS students or IS student's preference for Cornell. You would need to know # applied for each school. |
| Same for Penn…they must accept certain number from Philadelphia area |
| What school is this? Must be one of the highest performing and best at placement in the country. Our very large, well regarded suburban DC public school has had maybe 1-2 acceptances to Harvard and 0 to MIT in the past four years. If it's one NYC's versions of TJ, and those kids are mostly going to Cornell's (private) engineering school, it's not a very useful post, but whatever your school is, it has better results all around than any public HS I've seen around here |
Must be one of the NY specialized high schools. Or this may be a 3 years worth of data. |
Not necessarily. I went to Stuy, as did my niece. Many kids go to non-engineering schools at Cornell. Her friends went to ILR and Arts and Sciences, I was Hum Ec for Human Biology & Health. |
+1 also, total new undergrad population |
| I've always felt Cornell had more a 'state university' feel than an Ivy or SLAC. It's also large--undergrad enrollment the size of UVA. |
Low enrolling compared to the others. |