They could if they're confident enough to drop ED and still have 70%+ yield rate. FYI, Caltech doesn't have ED and its yield rate is 40%. |
Why would you choose to go to cornell if you take no pleasure in snow or cold? That is on you. Ithaca and the finger lakes are very beautiful but you need to get out in it and not sit around complaining. |
That’s exactly what I’m saying. Students don’t choose based on how good a school is, but how popular it is to laymen, which are two different things. Caltech is a better institution for STEM than Harvard, Yale, Princeton, etc. and yet their yield rate is 40%. That just shows that students don’t choose a school based on the strength of their academics. And that’s why to using yield rates as a measure of how good a school is doesn’t make sense at all. |
The stem kids know to go to cal tech but why would an econ or history kid choose cal tech over other options? The rankings are based on a more general picture which is not that useful. The narrow lists would be of more use to a student that already has focused on a major and area if study. |
Because academics strength is only one out of many factors to a school’s reputation and attractiveness. |
The Econ or history kid wouldn’t apply to Caltech in the first place. So thinking that the 60% who didn’t choose Caltech are all non STEM students is simply false. |
People who defend the HYPSM acronym with yield rates, “daring” Columbia to change to SCEA and have a 70% yield rate is beyond insufferable. This is a typical chicken-or-egg fallacy that they use so it’s impossible for any school to join the acronym.
They believe that what separates HYPSM from the rest is their SCEA program and 70% yield rate. In other words, they believe that popular schools among laymen should be considered the best schools. If you’re a high school student and you got into both Princeton and Columbia, chances are you are going to choose Princeton because it’s a “HYPSM school.” But since HYPSM is a term that is based on popularity, it creates a never ending cycle of reinforcing the HYPSM distinction. The problem lies in that HYPSM was constructed out of measuring popularity through yield rates and early action programs. As long as those insufferable people don’t consider the academics of the schools, there would be no way for any school to join the HYPSM acronym. So, please disregard any argument that uses yield rates to distinguish which school is better over another. |
It's wayyyyy better than your empty and meaningless words. |
I really don't think the kids that want to attend cal tech are deterred by the yield rate. |
I have been through this with multiple academically oriented students and they considered lots of things about different schools....it is strong in my interest, location, size, greek life or no, can I get in, etc......none of them ever cared about yield rate. |
Oh, p’shaw! |
Not saying people care about yield rate (as part of their decision). Yield rate is rather an outcome of people's choice. |
Every year, when this list is released, DCUM turns into an episode of Downton Abbey with people nattering about the riff raff new rich acting above their station. |
Clearly there is more to a school’s ranking than lay prestige, which is what yield rates largely measure. |
But people indirectly care about yield rate because that is what the internet used to distinguish HYPSM from the others, i.e when prestige is constructed by yield rates, it creates a never ending cycle to further boost schools with high yield rates. |