uh - guess you couldn't find a real source? |
| Cornell is part private, part public. There are nine privately endowed colleges as well as four publicly supported "statutory colleges": the New York State College of Agriculture and Life Sciences, College of Human Ecology, School of Industrial and Labor Relations, and College of Veterinary Medicine. The public colleges are less selective. |
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Is cornell still popular around here?
In the last couple of years it seems students from around here that have gotten in have turned it down either for cheaper in-state flagship publics, slacs, or higher ranked privates. im curious how cornell's yield has trended over the last 5 ears. |
Well, the Vet School is super competitive, but in general the above statement is accurate. I attended Cornell and it was well known that it was a little easier to get into the statutory schools than the College of Arts and Sciences, Engineering and Architecture. |
The veterinary school is #1 in the country, but it is not an undergrad school. |
I call BS. (1). The Vet school is not undergrad at all, and is the 2d most admission-competitive in the country anyway. (2). The ILR school is just as competitive, in terms of admitted-student objective data, as CAS or Engineering. (3). The NYS Ag school is actually the only one of the statutory Cornell colleges that is a Morrell state land-grant college with actual in-state statutory preferences; the others merely receive supplemental state funding and have lower state-resident tuition, but they receive very little supervision from the state regents. Study the charter before commenting, PP. |
If you've actually been following this issue closely and you think it doesn't have a higher than average suicide rate, clearly nothing we say is going to convince you. Unlike the "suicides at the Apple in China" story, the data has consistently backed this one up. |