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Wellesley. Excellent all-around education and, if your daughter is accepted at MIT in her junior year, she can complete a double degree at the latter (this program takes five years to complete between the Wellesley A.B. and the MIT S.B.). But Wellesley has a cross exchange program with MIT and Olin anyway, so even if she doesn't apply or get accepted to the double degree program, she can still take advantage of MIT courses and research opportunities.
That said, while a 13% acceptance rate is statistically greater than a 4% acceptance rate, it's still not a slam dunk for anyone. |
| What does STEM mean to this student? More like engineering or more like physics and mathematics? |
The OP posted a follow-up to say more like physics and math, not engineering. |
Thank you. Then I'll ask, what level of mathematics will your child have completed prior to high school graduation? |
| What is WASP schools? |
| Northeastern |
| UVA surpasses MIT in most cases and is tentatively less hard to get into, though in many cases is actually harder to get into for certain majors and when taking into account admissions for particular schools. |
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William and Mary
U Chicago Harvey Mudd Carleton Cal Tech Case Western CMU Georgia Tech Embry Riddle RPI |
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UVA surpasses MIT in what exactly? Tailgates?
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In student charisma, physical attractiveness, virility, familial status, academic chops, you name it. Not to mention prestige. |
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Va tech
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| Olin is an interesting (and much less selective) option |
Stanford (also impossible) Berkeley Duke Princeton Columbia |
UVA surpasses MIT in navy blazers and bow ties. |
All great schools, but Caltech (3.1% admit rate) isn’t really less impossible than MIT (4.9%.) They are both crazy hard to get into. |