They probably admit a lot from competitive states |
Well, Duke and Rice are both in top 10 for merit scholar enrollment, so you’re kind of wrong. |
| Who cares. I’d rather find some kids that are smart and want to make the world better than students in search of an institution/diploma that’s going to supposedly yield a lifetime of prestige. Life is what you do with it, not how many badges you earn. |
Yes, it’s so much better to be in a state where there are a lot of open-minded people. |
Perhaps those are the kids they wish for but tend to lose out on in a head-to-head against HYPMS Penn Duke Rice Brown Hopkins? |
Chicago is test optional. |
| This list is far from a good measure of student quality because it is extremely hard to become NMSFs in states such as NJ, MA, MD, VA, and CA. Excellent students who missed the cut there can *EASILY* become NMSFs in states like NM, OK, MS, and WV. These non-NMSFs at t20s tend to be academically much stronger than a lot of the NMSFs at Alabama and Tulsa. |
Ok yes Duke gets the top students from all around the country but 60-70% of Rice’s national merit scholars are likely from Texas, with very few from the North |
No, National Merit Scholars aren’t Finalists who got money from “somewhere.” National Merit Scholars are only the ones who receive scholarships directly from the NMSF itself. Receiving a scholarship from a university doesn’t make a Finalist a Scholar. |
+1 Rice is very Texas-centric, which makes sense because Texas is huge |
What about it is interesting? It just isn’t true. |
Except the majority of students are from these highly competitive states. |
Just not true. There are 3 ways to be a scholar. One is from the NMSF itself. One is from a corporate sponsor--which usually requires the student has a parent or stepparent who is an employee. One is by getting a scholarship from the college itself. https://www.nationalmerit.org/s/1758/interior.aspx?sid=1758&gid=2&pgid=396#college |
OP probably used ChatGPT. |
This is based off of psat and not sat |