and you'd expect that to be different for kids from the DMV (lots of us can't get our kids to consider Georgetown for same reasons) |
Prestige difference between BU and GW is pretty trivial. And frankly, BU is a very specific vibe that isn't for everyone. My kid just didn't like it. Had a rich kid feel, very very urban with the t running right down campus. Just fell flat in terms of any charm. Some kids LOVE Boston itself and that's a lot of the charm. But my kid couldn't see himself liking living on that campus. |
Ha. Good joke there buddy. |
I've never once heard GW referred to as an "it" school - and I have a degree from there. |
That’s debatable but irrelevant. Reach/Target/Safety doesn’t depend on how good a school is. It depends on how likely admissions is. BU has higher average stats and lower admit rate. |
Loved GWU. There new Engineering and Science building is a draw. |
I know a kid who got into both Princeton and BU, how did he not get yield protected? |
No one can really answer this without knowing what the kid wants to study. They both have certain strong programs. |
Demonstrated interest, maybe. Or applied to an unsaturated major. |
It’s called exceptions. ![]() |
So all these kids who got into BU and other top schools are just exceptions? No—yield protection is just a coping mechanism. |
GW gives me the impression as rich mediocre kids school. BU is tough, lots of try-hards. |
THEIR |
The Parchment data is unreliable. We ordinary data consumers cannot tell you exactly how but the company does not currently have and has not had, the representative sample of high schools that would be needed to answer this question.
Parchment data may be more promising in the future. The company is adding more high schools each year. But for now it's extremely unreliable. |
My kid toured both. Was a little overwhelmed by just how urban both are, and ended up not applying to either. However it helped them confirm that a pure urban campus wasn’t for them. |