Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Wharton unhooked is impossibly hard given athletes admitted there.
athletes are distributed fairly evenly among undergrad schools with SEAS having the least based on percent. Wharton has about 10%
Yeah, this is the biggest myth about Penn athletic recruiting. My kid was talking to the coaches for baseball and they said they had 3 Wharton slots for 9/10 recruits. Wharton is 25% of the undergrads at Penn, so that's roughly 25% (because you can't recruit 2.5 players...they round it to 3).
Considering athletes are 10% of the student population, that means they are generally 10% of each Penn school though I do believe it is skewed towards CAS and it's less than 10% for SEAS.
But Penn ED acceptances include ALL athletic recruits which takes up a huge percent of the ED spots. Even if athletes are only 10% of the final enrolled class, they may make up a much larger percent of the ED acceptances. Also lots of legacy admits in ED.
That’s a different point than athletic recruits mostly going to Wharton.
They make up roughly 20% of ED acceptances.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Applied math is the more flexible major, go that route. Finance, quant, consulting, phD, computational research, law, all options.
Math is not a means to an end.
Anonymous wrote:Applied math is the more flexible major, go that route. Finance, quant, consulting, phD, computational research, law, all options.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Wharton unhooked is impossibly hard given athletes admitted there.
athletes are distributed fairly evenly among undergrad schools with SEAS having the least based on percent. Wharton has about 10%
Yeah, this is the biggest myth about Penn athletic recruiting. My kid was talking to the coaches for baseball and they said they had 3 Wharton slots for 9/10 recruits. Wharton is 25% of the undergrads at Penn, so that's roughly 25% (because you can't recruit 2.5 players...they round it to 3).
Considering athletes are 10% of the student population, that means they are generally 10% of each Penn school though I do believe it is skewed towards CAS and it's less than 10% for SEAS.
But Penn ED acceptances include ALL athletic recruits which takes up a huge percent of the ED spots. Even if athletes are only 10% of the final enrolled class, they may make up a much larger percent of the ED acceptances. Also lots of legacy admits in ED.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Wharton unhooked is impossibly hard given athletes admitted there.
athletes are distributed fairly evenly among undergrad schools with SEAS having the least based on percent. Wharton has about 10%
Yeah, this is the biggest myth about Penn athletic recruiting. My kid was talking to the coaches for baseball and they said they had 3 Wharton slots for 9/10 recruits. Wharton is 25% of the undergrads at Penn, so that's roughly 25% (because you can't recruit 2.5 players...they round it to 3).
Considering athletes are 10% of the student population, that means they are generally 10% of each Penn school though I do believe it is skewed towards CAS and it's less than 10% for SEAS.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Wharton unhooked is impossibly hard given athletes admitted there.
athletes are distributed fairly evenly among undergrad schools with SEAS having the least based on percent. Wharton has about 10%
Anonymous wrote:Wharton unhooked is impossibly hard given athletes admitted there.