Anonymous wrote:... the probability of any student in the United States getting admitted to MIT in a year is 0.036% (lower if you consider non-us admits). Against that one in about 500 kids across the course of 5 years at Potomac getting admitted, or 0.2 pct. Doesn't look bad at all.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:this is a 4 year snapshot of enrollment (not admission):
https://www.potomacschool.org/academics/college-counseling/where-our-students-go-to-college
Op here.
Thank you. From your link, zero was enrolled. I got my data from www.polarislist.com
It seems two sources echo to each other.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I’m surprised to find out that during 2015-2020, only 1 admitted to MIT? vs. 6 to Harvard and 3 to Princeton. I’m curious is it true and how do you comprehend this? ]
I've got no connection to any of these schools, but my first question would be to ask how many applied during that time. My second question would be to ask how many might have been accepted but chose to go elsewhere. One raw number with no context says very little.
Anonymous wrote:I am confused why going to Potomac would enhance gaining admissions to MIT, or any other T10 for that matter. Rich kids with more homework doesn’t mean more capable students.
Anonymous wrote:this is a 4 year snapshot of enrollment (not admission):
https://www.potomacschool.org/academics/college-counseling/where-our-students-go-to-college
Anonymous wrote:I’m surprised to find out that during 2015-2020, only 1 admitted to MIT? vs. 6 to Harvard and 3 to Princeton. I’m curious is it true and how do you comprehend this? ]