NP: You don't agree with the part about seeking help from a guidance counselor or other professional rather than the experts at DCUM? No need to be nasty. Agree it was a bit long-winded but it was still more informative than 99% of the other posts here. Cheer up. |
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These programs are a lottery within a lottery. Penn accepts what -- 4% of applicants? 5%?
Huntsman and M&T draw from the accepted students, accepting a very small percentage of a very small percentage. Of course, there's no harm in applying for either, but it doesn't make sense to build one's college application strategy on them. |
Your post was too verbose & too negative. Try to be more concise. You offered some solid advice, but chose to dilute it & to pollute it with unnecessary remarks maligning other well-intentioned posters. |
I do not agree because that poster's point was to consult with such folks in order to assess the odds of being admitted to the program. Ignore that advice if you truly want the opportunity. |
M&T and Huntsman should NOT be part of your consideration. You can apply to them, don't count on it too much. These are dual degree programs. Fine if you got in. But you can double major at anything you want once you got in Penn, which is the critical part. You can double major at SEAS and CAS for example. I doubt it if there is any difference from these formal dual degree programs. Chill. |
I'm a new poster. And who declared you editor in chief? I agree with them that you need to be very careful around here as there is a lot of garbage that you have to sort through. Let's stay on message here and try to help this person. Even if you are somewhat correct. |
| It’s impossible almost to get in these. So forget these , but if you want to take chances go ed and if you get in, you will just be very lucky |
Whew ! Just did that reading your post. |
| Why are most of the students in these programs Chinese and Indian? It makes the programs very isolating if you are not a part of their cliques. |
You can't double major across schools at Penn, you have to do the dual degree, and be admitted to the 2nd school. It is a competitive process to be admitted as a student into Wharton or SEAS even once you are on campus. You don't have to do the named programs like M&T or Huntsman, but they actually make graduating easier because of the course scheduling. If you try to do it on your own, each school has their own rigorous core requirements, so plan to take 5+ years to finish. |
CAS plus SEAS is the Viper dual degree program. Yes you could apply to do an uncoordinated dual with each but it is extremely difficult and more classes /more work than the Viper program and none of the perks. Seas and wharton uncoordinated is more classes than M&T and so on for the other Dual degrees LSM and Huntsman. The structured dual degree programs are very difficult to get admitted to but for those that do, it is completed in 4 years plus it comes with funding and other perks (varies depending on the Dual) . The Stem duals have high numbers of international students, many on financial aid: these are some of the brightest stem students in the world. Penn seas as a single degree has an overall admit rate of 3% or just below. The duals that are a part of SEAS are even more competitive. Just look at these boards: everyone and their stray cat wants Engineering these days, especially top students who target T10/elite types. Penn Seas alone will get a student anywhere they want to go if they do not get Viper or M&T. |
You are right. What I meant is that you can easily double major at CAS: Computer Science at CAS + Econ at CAS. Biological Science + Econ at CAS. etc. CAS itself offers tons of majors for the purpose of double major. There is no need to do it across different schools. |
This kind of remark gets made over and over again. I think the premise needs to be challenged even though I don't know the demographics of these programs. I'm a white woman who has Chinese work friends because my company does business with China. My white dad was a university employee and he has two immigrant Chinese former grad student families that he's been regularly in touch with. One of these families made him a godfather of their oldest daughter (Stanford grad now) and named their son after him. I'm going to make a few points here. 1) People know when others are wary or not very accepting of them. That's basic body language. 2) Kids who have been pushed by their parents and also have high skill levels tend to have some issues with less serious students or students with skill gaps. I have a white on white example of this in my own background where I got roasted by a Ukrainian friend with a better knowledge of statistics and probability. Kids who make it to America from other countries often have been drilled very thoroughly. Know your stuff. 3) You need to be open-minded about food. I am willing to go to whatever restaurants and try things that may not be to my taste. I do a lot of international work and had international grad student friends. People notice when you won't try their food or obviously have issues with it (smell, etc.). 4) You need to understand/be comfortable with people shifting in and out of their native language in front of you. That's a dynamic where you just need to trust that people have reasons for doing that that are neutral or they need to do it for their own comfort. It's not rude unless they are intentionally concealing something from you. A lot of Americans lack multicultural/multilingual environment experience that gives them trust and comfort in these situations. It's necessary at times to "assume goodness" or simply politely ask to be included in the conversation. Cliques form in programs because people aren't trying to be friendly and open-minded and interested in others who are different from them. It's basic human nature. It's not race-specific. |
Is Penn Seas a small program? Its acceptance rate is lower than the highest ranked engineering schools: MIT, Stanford. |
SEAS is small, ~200, 250 kids per year. |