Your stats are old. The new admissions director has changed the % getting in ED. EA is being used a lot more. For the class of 2027, Tulane admitted 1,209 of the 3,852 ED applicants. Therefore, the Tulane ED acceptance rate for ED was 31%. This also means that the acceptance rate for the regular round was roughly 1-2%. |
I can see a NYC network. Just trying to emphasize that you need to know where the networks reside and plan to go to one of those areas. Miami is another with a strong NYC network. |
B/B+ if from private. B+/A- if public. And not the most rigorous course load. |
My DC was accepted to Tulane EA and the kids I know accepted ED this year are definitely not mediocre students. I think a lot of students understood this cycle was going to be a challenging admissions year (and it has been so far) and didn't want to roll the dice. That's the impression I'm getting anecdotally from the students I know who ED'd to schools outside of the T20s including Tulane. Many extremely strong students we know were rejected from their T10/20 ED1 schools and are now are in ED2 at Tulane. I've been researching LinkedIn for where Tulane alumni live. More difficult to determine where they are landing business-related internships. We both loved Tulane during our visit to NOLA, so it's a strong contender and I would love to hear more about experiences from current business students as far as internships go. Here are the Top 10 cities for Tulane alumni, so the majority outside of NOLA/LA live in NY and not TX. 1. Louisiana 2. New York Metro 3. New York City 4. Texas 5. California 6. New York State 7. DC / Baltimore 8. Florida 9. Los Angeles 10. Houston 11. San Francisco 12. Chicago |
| 50 year olds on here are imagining the Tulane of their college years. The university had an amazing opportunity to reimagine itself in the wake of the devastation caused by Hurricane Katrina when they had to close the school for an entire semester. As a result of Katrina, the school really focused on engaging and giving back to the community of New Orleans. Students have to complete 2 service learning courses to graduate. You can’t go abroad until you have done your initial service requirement. Many classes across all disciplines offer an additional 1 credit if you sign up for the service learning component. So if you are taking French you can sign up to go with your professor once a week to a French charter school and tutor students. Or in Public Health class you go at night to a local church to help run the food pantry. It is really unique and the admissions office looks for kids that are engaged in service. The research dollars are literally pouring into Tulane. This sort of sounds like a marketing blurb, but my DC will graduate this year from Tulane and absolutely loved his experience. |
Yea, pretty much. |
My DC’s friends are mostly from San Francisco, Los Angeles, NYC metro, Texas and DC. So the list makes sense. Lots of kids from these areas attend Tulane. |
This is accurate for what I’ve seen too. |
Not seeing that at our school. 3.0 GPAs are not getting into Tulane unless there is a strong legacy connection or some other hook. |
| I’d never in a million years send my kid to Tulane over UVA, especially in state. That would just be insane. What a waste of money. |
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Agree with this post. - parent of a Tulane (extremely bright and driven ) student
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"easy admit" for the DCUM crowd |
Who said anything about UVA?? |
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Not really mediocre students.
A lot of students go there because maybe they didn’t get into their first choice which may have been an Ivy or similar. With the way college admissions are these days, that means there’s a lot of really smart kids why can handle the academics anywhere. Other kids are there because it’s their first choice. Overall great school and great size etc |
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Our own "Goldilocks" search came up with:
BC UMiami Tulane Wake (not big city/airport) U Rochester (no D1 sports, not great city) too hard admit, did not consider further: Northwestern, WashU |