Julliard's acceptance rate is in the single digits. It is also a really small school compared to most on the list. |
Nah. Caltech requires students to take distribution courses outside the sciences, whereas my sibling went to Juilliard and really only learned music. |
That's incorrect. Of the top 10 on that website, only half are Ivies. |
I am going to guess that your sibling was immensely talented in music, like top .1% talented. Schools like Julliard are just as impessive to me as a school like Cal Tech. One wants to be a musician, the other an astrophysist. Both are at tippy top of their talent levels. |
Eastern International College is not a selective college. Its presence on the list is a sign of a quality control problem. |
Agree |
Do sites like this get their data from public records, or do they get them from the university directly? I know that UChicago doesn't give out a lot of information, so I wonder where they get it from? |
The data seems somewhat outdated too. It's from 2021-2022 |
Were you looking for 2025 data? |
At some point the Covid data will work its way out of the system. |
The list is meaningless, because it doesn't account for all the free apps--Colby, Northeastern--to increase the number and lower acceptance rates. |
UVA admits more OOS than other top publics, which decreases their yield rate. Basically, if you’re instate and have a great public school option, kids frequently take it. So, schools like Berkeley, UCLA, UT-Austin, and UNC are biased upward by the small share of seats for OOS. UVA and Michigan get dinged for offering more seats to OOS. |
Yes! UVA's yield is over 50% for in-state! |
Yep. They're first chair of their instrument at a major orchestra. I'm pretty proud of them! |