There's no way you were a top student at HYP and were also bad at math. |
So it has a lower ED acceptance rate than Harvard SCEA, all other ivies ED? How dumb are you? |
Where did you find this quote? BC from what I've seen, it's 5% for ED1, ED2, and EA combined. |
Has to be bad at math to spout out this nonsense, and devoid of any critical thinking skills. |
This was stated by Dean of Admissions during Admitted students zoom after ED1/EA round (December 2023). Approximately 20K students and about 5% (4-5%?) acceptance rate. Seems like they took a bit over half the class during this round. And this is probably what gets people confused. Just because they took half the class during this round, it doesn’t mean they have a 50% acceptance rate for this round. |
I was on the Chicago accepted students admission zoom last week. Dean Nondorf said "we received about 20,000 applications for the early round, and accepted about 1,000." He did NOT say that there were 20k early DECISION applications. I was listening carefully. It's entirely possible that 18k of those 20k applications were EA, and they accepted half of the ED applicants. No sour grapes here - my kid liked the school, he's going and I guess they have to do what they need to do to get out of their financial hole, but I don't love the shady admissions practices. |
Makes no sense that the majority of the 20k applications would be EA. At least at DC’s school, most kids apply to UChicago ED1. The close-to-zero EA acceptances rate is well known. This year, out of about 85 kids, 4 kids applied ED1…2 got in and 2 were rejected. Even if you assume that half of the 20k applications were ED1 and the other half EA and that the acceptance rate for EA was zero, the acceptance rate for ED1 would be around 10 percent. |
There is absolutely no way Chicago is getting 10k ED applicants. I did a deep dive on CDS of other selective schools. I don't have the #'s in front of me but I recall JHU had maybe 6k ED applicants and Northwestern around 4.5k. Penn gets 8k - and they're Penn. I'm betting Chicago gets no more than 5k. If all 1,000 spots went to ED applicants, that's a 20% acceptance rate, which anecdotally feels right. But it could be higher. |
There you go. It's 50%. |
Gosh…you are really bright, aren’t you? |
+1 |
I'm sorry this happened to you. Relationships can sometimes be difficult. But I fail to see how asking for a modicum of transparency from an institution's admissions processes, particularly one that claims to be "Ivy Plus," is the equivalent of a gaslighting partner in a relationship. Or perhaps as parents who have been misled numerous times by universities purporting to say one thing, but in reality practicing the opposite, we have earned the right to be a little skeptical when universities fail to be transparent with their admissions practices. Nothing against UChicago in particular. |
how do you know how many kids applied from your school and what their results were? |
no way U Chicago gets 10k ED applications as that would be higher than all Ivies
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for this cycle, so far Ivies reporting the number of ED applicants are:
Brown: 5,048 Columbia: 5,872 Dartmouth: 3,550 U Pennsylvania: 9,500 Chicago wont beat U Penn or Cornell for ED applications, likely around 6k similar to Columbia....implying a very high ED1 admissions acceptance rate
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