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College and University Discussion
Clearly amateurs https://m.youtube.com/watch?v=BxmgLLSQJX4 |
Agree! |
You agree that the bolded is true? You know this how? |
| Southern universities might have a higher quality of life? Warm weather, people spending more time outside, etc. One of my daughter’s classmates turned down Yale for Duke. To be fair I don’t think Yale is what it used to be anyways. |
Have you read this thread? Prior posters have gone on and on about all the great parties and fun times and, yes, hot coeds at Southern universities - their words, not mine. |
Easy to confirm with quick Google searches - go ahead and look ("record number applications" and "(name of school"). |
https://www.michigandaily.com/news/university-highlights-gains-in-applicants-for-class-of-2026-admissions/#:~:text=For%20the%20class% 20of%202026%2C%20the%20University%20of,to%20the%20over%2080%2C000%20applications%20received%20last%20year. For the class of 2026, the University of Michigan received a record breaking number of applications from prospective first year students, according to the University Record. In total, the University saw over 84,000 applications, which was a 6% increase to the over 80,000 applications received last year. |
If you all are interested in the SEC schools, great! I personally would not spend $120K on high school only to have my daughter go to a school where her main focus was dancing around in short shorts during rush with a bunch of tanning bed types. I, of course, know many smart people who went to SEC schools. I did not, however, encounter many of these in the elite law firm world of NYC or DC. Maybe that has changed. And I am talking about the predominant culture, not international students, etc. who I honestly think my child would not even find among the frat culture. I also know a lot of fratty types who are now Southern country clubbers (yes, successful but not really interesting). Not for me, but if you like it, great! |
That’s actually not that good, comparatively. Last year, Auburn received 68% more applications than the year before, and 150% more applications than they did two years prior. |
Calling BS on this person knowing anything about the “elite law firm world.” |
The key is 84,000 applications. |
Tons of kids would pick Vandy or Duke over schools like Cornell, Dartmouth, or University of Pennsylvania. Especially kids that live in the south. |
That sounds great to me! |
+1 duke in particular is in a class of its own in the south. It actually beats many ivies in the cross-admit battle (ie when students get into ivies or duke, majority pick duke). Vanderbilt is getting better but they have a ways to go, particularly academically. It doesn’t have any top-of-class departments other than maybe Peabody unlike Duke which has multiple top departments |
Exactly. That's twice the number of applications that Auburn received. And it's much easier to experience a big percentage increase in applications when starting from a lower baseline than another university. Plus, it's not just the University of Michigan. Purdue University, for example, received a record number of 68,000+ applications for its fall 2022 entering class. |