Are FL admissions easier now bc liberals are avoiding the state?

Anonymous
Expected. What we’re attempting to avoid is rampant, unchecked antisemitism.
Anonymous
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Anonymous wrote:Never a hard admit. Now easier. Most intelligent kids prefer to go to schools in states where alternative facts are shunned and true science and reason reign.


I know! Why would you want to go to school where you can’t get an abortion while waiting in line at Chipotle?


UF is very difficult to get into. Look at this year's stats.


Record number of applications and less than 10% OOS acceptance rate, yet people are screaming “The sky is Falling!” at the top of their lungs.


Where are people getting this 10% OOS figure?


From their ass. And now some actual data for you people to thing about. From googling, only 3% of the entire undergraduate student body is out of state. That means roughly 1000 students are out of state compared with a total of 33,628 students. You are surrounded by an unimpressive in-state student body where the acceptance rate is 60%. If you're an above average student, why would you want to apply out of state to UF? Your academic peers will be a tiny, tiny group.

Type of school: Public, Research
Size of undergraduate student body: 33,628
Percent out-of-state: 3%
Percent international: 1.14%
Female to Male ratio: 55:45


Wrong! There were over 60k who applied (probably close to 67k) and about 15k accepted (between both in state and out of state). Vast majority are from Florida - the competition amongst Floridians is fierce. A lot of kids with very high stats (1500+ and 4.4+) who got rejected. It was even more difficult for in-staters and many are thinking that the OOS acceptance rate is close to 8-9%. Last year was also super competitive - but this year even more. You are probably looking at figures from 20/30 years ago.


No, this is very recent data. But I shouldn't be surprised that a UF booster would lack reading comprehension and analytical skills.
Anonymous
Good riddance!
Anonymous
No Florida schools are more popular than ever, and harder to get into every year. My son with high stats was rejected.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:Expected. What we’re attempting to avoid is rampant, unchecked antisemitism.


+1
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:Never a hard admit. Now easier. Most intelligent kids prefer to go to schools in states where alternative facts are shunned and true science and reason reign.


I know! Why would you want to go to school where you can’t get an abortion while waiting in line at Chipotle?


UF is very difficult to get into. Look at this year's stats.


Record number of applications and less than 10% OOS acceptance rate, yet people are screaming “The sky is Falling!” at the top of their lungs.


Where are people getting this 10% OOS figure?


Do the math. Check the CDS updates. Check the December 2024 video presentation. Gather the early 2024 updates. Don’t demand that others spoon feed you details, but here you are.

74K+ applications this admissions cycle (priority and non-priority). Over 32K OOS applicants for less than 800 OOS slots. Even if the yield for OOS acceptances was only 25%, that translates into a max. of 3,200 acceptances. Acceptance rate for OOS less than 10%.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:Never a hard admit. Now easier. Most intelligent kids prefer to go to schools in states where alternative facts are shunned and true science and reason reign.


I know! Why would you want to go to school where you can’t get an abortion while waiting in line at Chipotle?


UF is very difficult to get into. Look at this year's stats.


Record number of applications and less than 10% OOS acceptance rate, yet people are screaming “The sky is Falling!” at the top of their lungs.


Where are people getting this 10% OOS figure?


Do the math. Check the CDS updates. Check the December 2024 video presentation. Gather the early 2024 updates. Don’t demand that others spoon feed you details, but here you are.

74K+ applications this admissions cycle (priority and non-priority). Over 32K OOS applicants for less than 800 OOS slots. Even if the yield for OOS acceptances was only 25%, that translates into a max. of 3,200 acceptances. Acceptance rate for OOS less than 10%.


*December 2023
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:oh god i hope UF is easier to get into. it’s my kids first choice. Would be a miracle if the admit this cycle is higher than last cycle. OOS admit rate was 19%. Also making it worst it moved up in rankings and is one of the best public universities in the country.

i hope liberals got the memo and are staying far away. Florida is so scary. Be very very scared.


You want your kid in a school that will be unaccredited?
That the qualified professors all left?
That the govenor of the state wants to limit the movement of all females?
That the gov. of the state just stated "covid boosters make you more likely to get covid"

I am a UF alumni who up until last year gave millions a year to UF.

I am not alone many of us have removed our scholarship funds and all donations to UF. What do you think will happen to services at UF without those funds?

Go Gators! Woo hoo now run by Ben Sasse who is an idiot when it comes to higher education.



Hahaha. Sure you did.
Anonymous
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Anonymous wrote:Don’t Say Gay is ludicrous.

A Don’t Say Gay law at the college level? Come on.


So you support pre-school and kindergarten teachers talking with their kids about the kids gender identity and sexual orientation? Interestingly, when the actual content of the law is described to people, over 70% approve.


That might make sense if any preschool or kindergarten teachers were actually talking with kids about those topics. They aren't and weren't, not even in Florida. Just another example of a crisis created to panic those who aren't aware of reality but are gullible enough to believe such crap.


But they are. Not all teachers and not everywhere, but it does happen. The bill was to pre-empt that happening in Florida. If parents want to cover that, then fine. But it didn’t belong in schools for little kids coming from a position of authority/teaching.

One Massachusetts kindergarten teacher gives children lessons on pronouns, including gender-neutral pronouns “they” and “ze,” and introduces them to concepts including trans identities and “gender queer,” he told The Washington Post. He doesn’t fully define the terms because it would be “too much” for kindergarteners.
“We don’t say a penis belongs to a man,” he told The Washington Post. He instead teaches that a penis belongs to a human, and that doctors sometimes get it wrong when determining a newborn baby’s gender.
Kara Haug, a sex-ed teacher in the Sacramento area, claimed she didn’t bring up gender identity in her classes but would simply answer students’ questions when they arose, she told The Washington Post. When one student asked her if she could stop her period if she felt like a boy, for example, she explained how hormones work.
Several states require that school curricula include LGBT topics, and multiple curriculum plans addressing transgender and gender ideology have come into use in schools, according to The Washington Post.
One of these lessons, titled “Pink, Blue and Purple,” instructs teachers to ask first graders how they know what gender they are and then explain that gender identity is a feeling and is not based on one’s body parts. It was developed by Advocates for Youth, a youth-oriented sexual health group.


Good for those teachers. I am so happy to hear we are familiarizing our youngest children with these concepts so they are accepting and inclusive when they get older. It’s useful antidote to the indoctrination some of them receive on Sundays in buildings where they are taught about a man from 2,000 years ago being a zombie.


In other words, you are happy your religious mystical beliefs are being taught instead of another group’s religious mystical beliefs.


No. I don't have religious beliefs. I just find it hilarious that a bunch of right wingers believe in zombies. The resurrection story is hilarious. What a farce...


Evangelical atheist.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:Never a hard admit. Now easier. Most intelligent kids prefer to go to schools in states where alternative facts are shunned and true science and reason reign.


I know! Why would you want to go to school where you can’t get an abortion while waiting in line at Chipotle?


UF is very difficult to get into. Look at this year's stats.


Record number of applications and less than 10% OOS acceptance rate, yet people are screaming “The sky is Falling!” at the top of their lungs.


Where are people getting this 10% OOS figure?


Do the math. Check the CDS updates. Check the December 2024 video presentation. Gather the early 2024 updates. Don’t demand that others spoon feed you details, but here you are.

74K+ applications this admissions cycle (priority and non-priority). Over 32K OOS applicants for less than 800 OOS slots. Even if the yield for OOS acceptances was only 25%, that translates into a max. of 3,200 acceptances. Acceptance rate for OOS less than 10%.


It seems like every kid I know who applied from NOVA got in.
Anonymous
We are in a public school in NOVA and that is not the feedback we are getting. We only know of one who is gotten in. The kid is going to ND so I assume they have pretty good stats.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:Never a hard admit. Now easier. Most intelligent kids prefer to go to schools in states where alternative facts are shunned and true science and reason reign.


I know! Why would you want to go to school where you can’t get an abortion while waiting in line at Chipotle?


UF is very difficult to get into. Look at this year's stats.


Record number of applications and less than 10% OOS acceptance rate, yet people are screaming “The sky is Falling!” at the top of their lungs.


Where are people getting this 10% OOS figure?


Do the math. Check the CDS updates. Check the December 2024 video presentation. Gather the early 2024 updates. Don’t demand that others spoon feed you details, but here you are.

74K+ applications this admissions cycle (priority and non-priority). Over 32K OOS applicants for less than 800 OOS slots. Even if the yield for OOS acceptances was only 25%, that translates into a max. of 3,200 acceptances. Acceptance rate for OOS less than 10%.


It seems like every kid I know who applied from NOVA got in.


Well, that settles that! Your anonymous anecdotal quip certainly trumps the actual data, right?
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:Never a hard admit. Now easier. Most intelligent kids prefer to go to schools in states where alternative facts are shunned and true science and reason reign.


I know! Why would you want to go to school where you can’t get an abortion while waiting in line at Chipotle?


UF is very difficult to get into. Look at this year's stats.


Record number of applications and less than 10% OOS acceptance rate, yet people are screaming “The sky is Falling!” at the top of their lungs.


Where are people getting this 10% OOS figure?


Do the math. Check the CDS updates. Check the December 2024 video presentation. Gather the early 2024 updates. Don’t demand that others spoon feed you details, but here you are.

74K+ applications this admissions cycle (priority and non-priority). Over 32K OOS applicants for less than 800 OOS slots. Even if the yield for OOS acceptances was only 25%, that translates into a max. of 3,200 acceptances. Acceptance rate for OOS less than 10%.


It seems like every kid I know who applied from NOVA got in.


I only heard about one person at McLean getting in. I have heard that a lot got rejected. I don't know about other schools. However, some of the kids that I know who got rejected had very high stats.
Anonymous
This explains a lot for Jewish students. Only one southern college in the above average category for anti semitic hostility (Emory) and zero in the highest antisemitic hostility category. Brandeis is the only NE school in the lowest category. Seven southern schools, four of which are in Florida, are in the lowest category.

https://x.com/profdbernstein/status/1764274158026858903?s=61&t=0L5nhzrbcJwFfJRjPVpsvA

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Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:Never a hard admit. Now easier. Most intelligent kids prefer to go to schools in states where alternative facts are shunned and true science and reason reign.


I know! Why would you want to go to school where you can’t get an abortion while waiting in line at Chipotle?


UF is very difficult to get into. Look at this year's stats.


Record number of applications and less than 10% OOS acceptance rate, yet people are screaming “The sky is Falling!” at the top of their lungs.


Where are people getting this 10% OOS figure?


Do the math. Check the CDS updates. Check the December 2024 video presentation. Gather the early 2024 updates. Don’t demand that others spoon feed you details, but here you are.

74K+ applications this admissions cycle (priority and non-priority). Over 32K OOS applicants for less than 800 OOS slots. Even if the yield for OOS acceptances was only 25%, that translates into a max. of 3,200 acceptances. Acceptance rate for OOS less than 10%.


*December 2023


The data you are showing here is similar to the one above. Less than 3% of students are out of state. WHY, why would you go to a school that is 97% in-state students?
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