Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It’s no longer an advantage to apply to Cornell ED by the way. But that’s another conversation.
officially?
I thought the policy change that was announced during the last admissions cycle was just that Cornell was going to take fewer kids during ED -- not that ED was no longer going to be an advantage at all. In fact, among Ivy schools offering ED I think Cornell ED provides the biggest relative advantage vis-a-vis RD because a far lower percentage of the total Cornell ED admits are comprised of athletes, legacy and Questbridge due to Cornell's far larger freshman class size. Thus a bigger percentage of the ED acceptances at Cornell are unhooked than at its Ivy peers.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It’s no longer an advantage to apply to Cornell ED by the way. But that’s another conversation.
officially?
Anonymous wrote:It’s no longer an advantage to apply to Cornell ED by the way. But that’s another conversation.
Anonymous wrote:We have two kids that graduated from Cornell in last 3 years. Our kids could not be more different from one another but both applied ED and both really enjoyed their Cornell experience. With 13,000 undergrads you can definitely find your particular tribe.
Anonymous wrote:Relatively recent Cornell alumni here (graduated in past 5-6 years). It’s one of the bigger top tier schools - I think the largest Ivy by a long shot - so you can definitely find your people! You certainly don’t need a frat or sorority to do so (I was never interested in them) and there are also “nerdy” frats that don’t focus on partying and drinking anyway. You can go through clubs or living groups to find friends.
I will say though that Dyson has a reputation for being very party focused so some partying might be required to network if your kid wants to go into business/econ/i-banking.
Anonymous wrote:Have son go visit. Check out the vibe. Chat with students.
Anonymous wrote:Does he play any sports? My kid found his people through a rec-level sports club. He also lucked out and liked the kids in his first year suite. He did not join a frat and seemed to have no issues making friends.