Don't think it's difficult to transfer from ILR to CAS. Most doesn't bother. |
| Nursing at Emory? |
| humanities at many colleges |
If you think the difference between a 5%, 10% and 20 % chance at admittance is meaningful to an applicant, clearly you did not study math at Cornell. |
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NYU Gallatin?
Guessing 10% admit rate increases to 20%? Maybe. |
| any of these schools with a first year abroad program |
How is the slant for a CALS stem major (math, physics, etc) different from engineering? |
| I hear Harvard has an extension school that's easy to get into. |
For in-staters, it would likely raise your tuition. Anyway, the ILR undergrad degree is a very specific program. Perhaps the closest majors to switch to might be Economics or Public Policy (in Human Ecology/Jeb Brooks). It's not clear you'd have better career prospects with either of those. If you are NYC connected you don't need to switch between ILR and CAS to improve job prospects. |
CALS is biological science/ag/environmental. You won't find math or physics major there. Premed college. |
PP. Did you leave a word out of your post? Maybe the word "not"? There's no need to be snitty. It's my opinion that a 5-20% chance is no sure thing and therefore the applicant still has to have a full range of apps to a bunch of universities, regardless. Applying to a less desirable college (to you) in order to get in messes up 25% of your college education if you succeed. I actually did not attend Cornell. I did get a full-ride MBA school offer from them though. The school was great but my spouse and I had career plans that didn't align with Cornell's placement strengths. It makes me sad that people are so desperate for Ivy that they would apply to a university they don't really want to attend, to a college that isn't their first choice, in a part of the country that doesn't appeal to them. Penn was a bit like that when I was in college. Because Philly was a lot rattier. |
Ag school is really hard RD. They typically reject or WL most students - who end up often getting into T10. Yes, full of pre-med and science kids. I wouldn't say its easier and might actually be harder OOS than CAS. |
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For cornell, if you apply ILR, Nolan, Brooks, CALS, the larger issue - do you want a liberal arts education or not? None of these are classic liberal arts schools and your kid may be sorely disappointed.
CALS does a great job at filtering through all the Ivy or bust kids and really only admitting kids that they think will thrive there. Its a very specific focused set of supp essays. That would ONLY work for CALS and no other school (most likely). There's a Cornell whisperer essay lady that people hire. I've actually heard of a new one this cycle, too. Let's see what the results look like. Like the long Michigan essays, the Cornell essays are looking for something VERY specific. I wouldn't overlook it at all. |
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CMU humanities.
Basically a backdoor to take any and all States, Info System, CS and Engineering classes - assuming you meet the pre-reqs. Employers actually prefer humanities + tech combo |
| * Stats |