Totally different demographics. |
Harvard and Vanderbilt get roughly the same number of apps - 50-some thousand.
Penn actually gets more. |
Vandy is what Duke used to be 15-20 years ago. |
Penn had 72,500 applications. |
No one is turning down HYP for Vandy. No one. |
Linebackers? |
No one is turning down HYP for Vandy. The fraternity bros at Vandy say thank GOD! |
I got into Vanderbilt in 1988 with 1220 SAT and a D in AB Calc first semester of my senior year from my public HS. And I didn’t go. Times have changed! |
Test optional in a world of the elites going test required. They get a lot of the rich that can’t get the scores. |
LOL there is no chance any student in their right mind is turning down Harvard, Yale or Princeton for ... Vanderbilt. |
No. They don't. |
Less than 23 percent of students at Vandy go Greek. And mine would have turned down Harvard and Princeton for Vanderbilt. Better fit. He's athletic and very social. He would have thought about Yale though. But ED is what it is and never got a chance to apply. But no regrets. Very happy. A good fit for him. I think Vanderbilt is managing the free speech space very well. |
"By the numbers, just about everything seems to be going Vandy's way. Applications are up, to a record of nearly 50,000 for the class of 2029. The acceptance rate is down to about 5%. That makes 152-year-old Vanderbilt almost as selective as Yale University — and more selective than Dartmouth College or New York University.
Elizabeth Stone, president of college counseling firm Top Tier Admissions, calls it a 'unicorn school, with strong academics, a vibrant Greek life and Division 1 sports. Last year, the Commodores beat No. 1 University of Alabama's Crimson Tide in a historic 40-35 upset. Founded in 1873 - 237 years after Harvard - with a bequest from railroad tycoon Cornelius 'the Commodore' Vanderbilt, Vandy this fall is estimating 7,360 undergraduate students, the largest in its history." |
I think Vandy is a great place doing lots of great things but the Vandy boosters here are getting a little out of hand. They are almost as bad as Northeastern, Bucknell and Holy Cross. Though Vandy has more reason to brag than those. |
Times have definitely changed. I got into Columbia in 1988 from a public HS with i think a 1270 SAT. (Definitely didn't hit 1300). And didnt even take calculus in hs... I did well in college, but if I was applying to schools today, Vandy would be higher on my list. |