Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What schools are accepting a high percentage of the population that used to feed the Ivy League back in the 90s? UMC, private prep-school or top suburban public, high SAT/ACT scores
State flagship honors programs and non-U.S. universities.
St. Andrews in Scotland & McGill in Canada.
I agree that large state flagship university honors colleges are attracting some.
People are more knowledgeable about college options so talented students end up at a much wider variety of schools than they did several decades ago.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What schools are accepting a high percentage of the population that used to feed the Ivy League back in the 90s? UMC, private prep-school or top suburban public, high SAT/ACT scores
State flagship honors programs and non-U.S. universities.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What schools are accepting a high percentage of the population that used to feed the Ivy League back in the 90s? UMC, private prep-school or top suburban public, high SAT/ACT scores
State flagship honors programs and non-U.S. universities.
Anonymous wrote:What schools are accepting a high percentage of the population that used to feed the Ivy League back in the 90s? UMC, private prep-school or top suburban public, high SAT/ACT scores
Anonymous wrote:Here's a really specific answer for OP, based on the 19-21-year0old children of friends, <--- ALL of whom graduated from an Ivy undergrad in the 80s:
Rice
Tufts
Wash U
UCLA
Vanderbilt
U. Chicago
Brown
Amherst
Lafayette
Anonymous wrote:Schools like Elon and Northeastern have absorbed higher tier applicants in the recent past as compared to their historical past.
Also some of the flagships like Michigan and Wisconsin are much harder to get into today as compared to 15 or 30 years ago.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What schools are accepting a high percentage of the population that used to feed the Ivy League back in the 90s? UMC, private prep-school or top suburban public, high SAT/ACT scores
Most of them are still going Ivy. Some need a sport to help.
Some drop to the next tier.
Anonymous wrote:Schools like Elon and Northeastern have absorbed higher tier applicants in the recent past as compared to their historical past.
Also some of the flagships like Michigan and Wisconsin are much harder to get into today as compared to 15 or 30 years ago.
Anonymous wrote:What schools are accepting a high percentage of the population that used to feed the Ivy League back in the 90s? UMC, private prep-school or top suburban public, high SAT/ACT scores