what do you think the 50% of Dartmouth's SAT scores are

Anonymous
since it's not on CDS

is a 1520 in the mix?
Anonymous
Who is this Dartmouth poster?
Anonymous
they used to disclose.

looking back to 2019
English 25/75 was 700/770
Math 25/75 was 720/790

I think a 1500 puts you firmly in 50% range
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:Who is this Dartmouth poster?


people are allowed to be interested in schools beyond Williams and Harvard
Anonymous
You can see the section score ranges for fall 2023 freshmen, Dartmouth class of 2027, here
https://nces.ed.gov/collegenavigator/?q=dartmouth&s=all&id=182670
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:You can see the section score ranges for fall 2023 freshmen, Dartmouth class of 2027, here
https://nces.ed.gov/collegenavigator/?q=dartmouth&s=all&id=182670


and this was when they were still test optional. so this was likely highest average ever
Anonymous
Even better, Dartmouth released slides showing TO and SAT submisdion acceptance rate and showed relative GPA.

Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:Even better, Dartmouth released slides showing TO and SAT submisdion acceptance rate and showed relative GPA.



Dartmouth isn't TO now
Anonymous
It really depends on where you're coming from and what kind of school you attended.

DMV kids are expected to have high scores and even more so if you attended a top private or a top public.

My daughter is at Dartmouth and had a 1560 and the kids from competitive areas (DMV, Bay area, NYC, Boston, etc) that she knows had a similar score (35+ or 1550+), especially if coming from a top boarding school or top private. Then you have a lot of kids who are Questbridge or otherwise FGLI and/or are from rural America (yes, stereotypes are often true) who may have had a 1410 or 1450. So the average across the population really means very little. It's all about what the average at YOUR high school is. To whom much has been given, much is expected.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:It really depends on where you're coming from and what kind of school you attended.

DMV kids are expected to have high scores and even more so if you attended a top private or a top public.

My daughter is at Dartmouth and had a 1560 and the kids from competitive areas (DMV, Bay area, NYC, Boston, etc) that she knows had a similar score (35+ or 1550+), especially if coming from a top boarding school or top private. Then you have a lot of kids who are Questbridge or otherwise FGLI and/or are from rural America (yes, stereotypes are often true) who may have had a 1410 or 1450. So the average across the population really means very little. It's all about what the average at YOUR high school is. To whom much has been given, much is expected.


This. Dartmouth’s test scores were problematic under TO and it wants to
Hide that fact. Not surprising.
Anonymous
Dartmouth is an ideal school for a lot of students. But it's really not accessible for the vast majority of accomplished students. I wouldn't let a kid get fixated on it - especially in this area. Go look at your high school data over the past few years and see how many unhooked students got in over the past few years. The answer is almost always zero.
Anonymous
dartmouth really favors a very few select high schools. their average SATS are comparable similar T15ish level schools.
Anonymous
A very small sample from DD’s private school last year.

Five kids applied (all unhooked, no athletes, no legacies). Three were accepted, one was waitlisted, and one was rejected.

The test scores of the accepted students (1500-1540) were lower than those of the waitlisted/rejected (1540-1580). And the GPAs of the acceptances were lower than of the waitlisted/rejected.

Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:Dartmouth is an ideal school for a lot of students. But it's really not accessible for the vast majority of accomplished students. I wouldn't let a kid get fixated on it - especially in this area. Go look at your high school data over the past few years and see how many unhooked students got in over the past few years. The answer is almost always zero.


Yes-there is no magic formula or anything you can do if you don't meet one of their many institutional priorities or come from a feeder private school. Dartmouth is tiny (1100/year) and within this 1100 they have to roster a ton of sports teams, fill MANY Questbridge spots, admit legacies, admit Native Americans (they were built on Ancestral lands), internationals and on and on. Then they fill most of the remaining spots with kids from a handful of top private schools. This year there were a handful of privates who had 5 kids (each) matriculate at Dartmouth (out of high school classes of less than 100). There are feeders and then there are FEEDERS and Dartmouth has the latter.

By all means apply and you may get your number pulled (someone has to!!) but the decision won't come down to the SAT score.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:A very small sample from DD’s private school last year.

Five kids applied (all unhooked, no athletes, no legacies). Three were accepted, one was waitlisted, and one was rejected.

The test scores of the accepted students (1500-1540) were lower than those of the waitlisted/rejected (1540-1580). And the GPAs of the acceptances were lower than of the waitlisted/rejected.



Yield protected. Dartmouth knew they were going to get in to HYPSM.
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