Yup. Yeah, FL or GA with the in state deals sound great. But this is the fine print |
For all the people mentioning California, the UCs have been playing the admissions game unpredictably this past year and a lot of kids got frozen out of schools they thought they were a shoe in for.
No one ever seems to talk about Tennessee or Kentucky? How are the flagships in those states? Alabama has Auburn and 'Bama. Two solid options. SC has USC and Clemson. |
Yup. We live in Chapel Hill and know so many kids with great stats who didn't get in to UNC. It's much easier if you live somewhere else in NC, but then you have to live somewhere else in NC. |
Yes, for many places you do need to establish residency more than a year before you plan to enroll. For California: https://www.ucop.edu/residency/residency-requirements.html For florida: https://www.floridashines.org/residency-for-in-state-tuition#:~:text=To%20be%20eligible%20for%20in,first%20day%20of%20the%20term For Texas: https://admissions.utexas.edu/residency |
using the Cal State system. That's considered way below the U.C. system |
VA for sure due to the amount and diversity of options. |
Cal Poly & SJSU are not |
Not from Virginia. It's very difficult to get in. Less then 10% OOS. UVA takes 30% OOS. Very different systems |
FL or GA for the Bright/Hope scholarships |
+1 VA's system is unrivaled |
“Way below” is an exaggeration. All of the UCs are pretty hard to get into now. In some fields it might even make more sense to go to a CSU. |
No there's still UC Riverside & UC Merced. They have lower acceptance rates of 65% & 86% respectively. Some of the Cal States are competitive - Cal Poly San Luis is 33%, Cal State San Diego is 38% and Long Beach is 47% |
Hmm...I wonder who my fellow Chapel Hillian who visits DCUM is. Anyway, while I have always heard it's harder to get into UNC from CH than other parts of NC, so many kids get in from my kids' high school. This year pretty much every "great" student and even some merely "good" students who we know applied, got in. (We know of 2 who didn't get in.) I was surprised by a few of the acceptances. Our school sends over 10% of its students to UNC. I just looked at the scattergram for our high school (which probably could be more accurate, but it's the best we've got), and for 2022 it says 70 applied and 31 were accepted. In 2021 it says 80 applied and 37 were accepted. That seems pretty high to me. Our senior class size is usually under 200. This year it's ~172. |
So? Not everyone wants to go to grad school. Several CSUs are known to have great ROI, and some are really great for STEM, Cal poly SLO, Pomona, SJSU feeder to SV companies, etc.. |
Disagree. Anyone can walk into a Cal State. UCs? no. |