Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:Does anyone NOT get into Pitt?
For yield reasons, they end up accepting most everyone above 1300/1600.
Pitt flips the approach to admissions on its head. They accept a very high percentage of qualified students with the full knowledge that only a minority will end up attending. But with a higher acceptance rate, they actually end up with a freshman class with higher stats than if they had a lower acceptance rate and pushed away potential applicants who had good stats. In other words, they get better students applying on average than they might otherwise.
Smart and humane. More colleges should do this. With USNews having dropped yield, there's not much to lose. So grateful to schools like this for welcoming students there.
Please share with us your plan to have Stanford reduce yield.
There’s nothing magical about Pitt, it’s a very fine school.
But it has comparative advantages other schools can’t duplicate:
- State flagship is very expensive even in-state for a public school.
- Located in a safe big city with many pro sports and cultural attractions.
- Lots of merit aid for out of state students.
- Next door to a premier engineering and arts school, there are a ton of college kids around.
- Within a 5 hour drive of a much wealthier metro area (that’s us).