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Reply to "I don’t understand why top Canadian universities have such high acceptance rates compared to the U.S."
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[quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous]I’ve been comparing the admissions statistics of top Canadian universities with those of similarly prestigious U.S. public institutions, and the differences are striking. When we look at applicant volume, acceptance rates, admitted numbers, first-year enrollments, and total student populations, it becomes even more apparent. Top Canadian Universities University of Toronto (U of T) Applicants: ~60,000–70,000+ Acceptance Rate: ~40–43% Admitted: ~25,000–30,000 Enrolled Freshmen: ~14,000 Total Student Population: ~90,000+ (across all campuses) University of British Columbia (UBC) Applicants: ~40,000–45,000+ Acceptance Rate: ~50% Admitted: ~20,000–22,000 Enrolled Freshmen: ~8,000–9,000 Total Student Population: ~65,000+ McGill University Applicants: ~35,000–40,000 Acceptance Rate: ~40–46% Admitted: ~14,000–18,000 Enrolled Freshmen: ~6,000 Total Student Population: ~40,000 Top U.S. Public Universities UCLA Applicants: ~149,700 Acceptance Rate: ~9–10% Admitted: ~10,000 Enrolled Freshmen: ~6,400 Total Student Population: ~46,000 (undergrad + grad) UC Berkeley Applicants: ~128,000+ Acceptance Rate: ~14–15% Admitted: ~15,000 Enrolled Freshmen: ~6,700 Total Student Population: ~45,000 University of Michigan (Ann Arbor) Applicants: ~83,000+ Acceptance Rate: ~18–20% Admitted: ~15,000 Enrolled Freshmen: ~7,200 Total Student Population: ~51,000 University of Virginia (UVA) Applicants: ~56,000+ Acceptance Rate: ~19–21% Admitted: ~9,950 Enrolled Freshmen: ~3,900 Total Student Population: ~25,000 UNC Chapel Hill Applicants: ~57,000+ Acceptance Rate: ~19% Admitted: ~10,300+ Enrolled Freshmen: ~4,200 Total Student Population: ~30,000 Looking at these figures side by side, Canadian universities are admitting a significantly larger proportion of their applicants, often 2–4 times the acceptance rate of the U.S. schools listed. Despite these higher acceptance rates, Canadian institutions like U of T, UBC, and McGill still maintain strong academic reputations, appear prominently in global rankings, and consistently produce high-quality research. It raises the question: Is something off in the way the U.S. system is structured? [b]Are ultra-low acceptance rates in the U.S. more about prestige and scarcity than educational quality or capacity? [/b]Meanwhile, Canada seems to strike a balance—large, top-ranked schools admitting a greater share of qualified applicants and still delivering excellence. What are your thoughts? Is the U.S. higher education model broken or overly exclusive? Could U.S. public universities adopt strategies from Canada—such as more robust infrastructure and funding—to support larger incoming classes without compromising on standards? It’s a puzzling contrast, and I’m curious to hear what others think about it.[/quote] ding, ding, ding. US parents are hung up on “the exclusive experience”, even though these so-called “elite” universities have ample resources to enlarge their student population considerably. Every time a college tries to expend, there’s wailing and gnashing of teeth and pearl-cutching about “destroying the brand”. [/quote] Well no, that’s not it. If say UCLA tripled its class size and by necessity reduced student support and extras even more, then parents of “advanced kids” would be crying about class size and how ugly the dorms are. Also all of the states OP listed have additional less exclusive state colleges. [/quote]
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