Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:https://www.collegeevaluator.com/rankings/highest-admission-yield/
Williams yield: #28, 52% yield (9% acceptance rate)
Emory yield: #92, 34% yield (13% acceptance rate)
Williams is more of a "first choice" than Emory.
Great information, but I think that you may have missed the point of my earlier post.
My earlier post focused just on the schools that Williams College listed as its overlap schools. If you think that 52% of those accepted to Williams and any of Harvard, Yale, Princeton, and Stanford are selectig Williams,you are engaging in wishful thinking--not reality.
Great information, but it’s not information at all. It’s just your speculation based on your own bias.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:https://www.collegeevaluator.com/rankings/highest-admission-yield/
Williams yield: #28, 52% yield (9% acceptance rate)
Emory yield: #92, 34% yield (13% acceptance rate)
Williams is more of a "first choice" than Emory.
Great information, but I think that you may have missed the point of my earlier post.
My earlier post focused just on the schools that Williams College listed as its overlap schools. If you think that 52% of those accepted to Williams and any of Harvard, Yale, Princeton, and Stanford are selectig Williams,you are engaging in wishful thinking--not reality.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:https://www.collegeevaluator.com/rankings/highest-admission-yield/
Williams yield: #28, 52% yield (9% acceptance rate)
Emory yield: #92, 34% yield (13% acceptance rate)
Williams is more of a "first choice" than Emory.
Great information, but I think that you may have missed the point of my earlier post.
My earlier post focused just on the schools that Williams College listed as its overlap schools. If you think that 52% of those accepted to Williams and any of Harvard, Yale, Princeton, and Stanford are selectig Williams,you are engaging in wishful thinking--not reality.
And yet the yield numbers suggest that a Willliams admit making that choice with respect to its overlap schools is significantly more likely than an Emory admit choosing Emory over its respective overlap schools (which are themselves less selective than the Williams overlap schools).
Williams is competing with other LACs not Unis, especially not HYP. Here are Williams peer schools. The only university was Trinity college. You're delusional.
https://www.chronicle.com/article/who-does-your-college-think-its-peers-are?cid2=gen_login_refresh&cid=gen_sign_in
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:https://www.collegeevaluator.com/rankings/highest-admission-yield/
Williams yield: #28, 52% yield (9% acceptance rate)
Emory yield: #92, 34% yield (13% acceptance rate)
Williams is more of a "first choice" than Emory.
Great information, but I think that you may have missed the point of my earlier post.
My earlier post focused just on the schools that Williams College listed as its overlap schools. If you think that 52% of those accepted to Williams and any of Harvard, Yale, Princeton, and Stanford are selectig Williams,you are engaging in wishful thinking--not reality.
And yet the yield numbers suggest that a Willliams admit making that choice with respect to its overlap schools is significantly more likely than an Emory admit choosing Emory over its respective overlap schools (which are themselves less selective than the Williams overlap schools).
Williams is competing with other LACs not Unis, especially not HYP. Here are Williams peer schools. The only university was Trinity college. You're delusional.
https://www.chronicle.com/article/who-does-your-college-think-its-peers-are?cid2=gen_login_refresh&cid=gen_sign_in
PP listed HYP as Williams overlap schools, not me.
Williams College listed their overlap schools as: Amherst, Brown, Dartmouth, Harvard, Yale, Middlebury, Princeton, & Stanford.
Again, the source for this list is Williams College.
Amherst College lists their overlap schools as: Williams, Middlebury, Colby, Yale, Brown, Harvard, Princeton, & Stanford.
Bowdoin sitting there wondering why they don't count
Yes, I would have thought Bowdoin and Colby would have been on these lists.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:https://www.collegeevaluator.com/rankings/highest-admission-yield/
Williams yield: #28, 52% yield (9% acceptance rate)
Emory yield: #92, 34% yield (13% acceptance rate)
Williams is more of a "first choice" than Emory.
Great information, but I think that you may have missed the point of my earlier post.
My earlier post focused just on the schools that Williams College listed as its overlap schools. If you think that 52% of those accepted to Williams and any of Harvard, Yale, Princeton, and Stanford are selectig Williams,you are engaging in wishful thinking--not reality.
And yet the yield numbers suggest that a Willliams admit making that choice with respect to its overlap schools is significantly more likely than an Emory admit choosing Emory over its respective overlap schools (which are themselves less selective than the Williams overlap schools).
Williams is competing with other LACs not Unis, especially not HYP. Here are Williams peer schools. The only university was Trinity college. You're delusional.
https://www.chronicle.com/article/who-does-your-college-think-its-peers-are?cid2=gen_login_refresh&cid=gen_sign_in
PP listed HYP as Williams overlap schools, not me.
Williams College listed their overlap schools as: Amherst, Brown, Dartmouth, Harvard, Yale, Middlebury, Princeton, & Stanford.
Again, the source for this list is Williams College.
Amherst College lists their overlap schools as: Williams, Middlebury, Colby, Yale, Brown, Harvard, Princeton, & Stanford.
Bowdoin sitting there wondering why they don't count
Yes, I would have thought Bowdoin and Colby would have been on these lists.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:https://www.collegeevaluator.com/rankings/highest-admission-yield/
Williams yield: #28, 52% yield (9% acceptance rate)
Emory yield: #92, 34% yield (13% acceptance rate)
Williams is more of a "first choice" than Emory.
Great information, but I think that you may have missed the point of my earlier post.
My earlier post focused just on the schools that Williams College listed as its overlap schools. If you think that 52% of those accepted to Williams and any of Harvard, Yale, Princeton, and Stanford are selectig Williams,you are engaging in wishful thinking--not reality.
And yet the yield numbers suggest that a Willliams admit making that choice with respect to its overlap schools is significantly more likely than an Emory admit choosing Emory over its respective overlap schools (which are themselves less selective than the Williams overlap schools).
Williams is competing with other LACs not Unis, especially not HYP. Here are Williams peer schools. The only university was Trinity college. You're delusional.
https://www.chronicle.com/article/who-does-your-college-think-its-peers-are?cid2=gen_login_refresh&cid=gen_sign_in
PP listed HYP as Williams overlap schools, not me.
Williams College listed their overlap schools as: Amherst, Brown, Dartmouth, Harvard, Yale, Middlebury, Princeton, & Stanford.
Again, the source for this list is Williams College.
Amherst College lists their overlap schools as: Williams, Middlebury, Colby, Yale, Brown, Harvard, Princeton, & Stanford.
Bowdoin sitting there wondering why they don't count
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:https://www.collegeevaluator.com/rankings/highest-admission-yield/
Williams yield: #28, 52% yield (9% acceptance rate)
Emory yield: #92, 34% yield (13% acceptance rate)
Williams is more of a "first choice" than Emory.
Great information, but I think that you may have missed the point of my earlier post.
My earlier post focused just on the schools that Williams College listed as its overlap schools. If you think that 52% of those accepted to Williams and any of Harvard, Yale, Princeton, and Stanford are selectig Williams,you are engaging in wishful thinking--not reality.
And yet the yield numbers suggest that a Willliams admit making that choice with respect to its overlap schools is significantly more likely than an Emory admit choosing Emory over its respective overlap schools (which are themselves less selective than the Williams overlap schools).
Williams is competing with other LACs not Unis, especially not HYP. Here are Williams peer schools. The only university was Trinity college. You're delusional.
https://www.chronicle.com/article/who-does-your-college-think-its-peers-are?cid2=gen_login_refresh&cid=gen_sign_in
PP listed HYP as Williams overlap schools, not me.
Williams College listed their overlap schools as: Amherst, Brown, Dartmouth, Harvard, Yale, Middlebury, Princeton, & Stanford.
Again, the source for this list is Williams College.
Amherst College lists their overlap schools as: Williams, Middlebury, Colby, Yale, Brown, Harvard, Princeton, & Stanford.
Bowdoin sitting there wondering why they don't count
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:https://www.collegeevaluator.com/rankings/highest-admission-yield/
Williams yield: #28, 52% yield (9% acceptance rate)
Emory yield: #92, 34% yield (13% acceptance rate)
Williams is more of a "first choice" than Emory.
Great information, but I think that you may have missed the point of my earlier post.
My earlier post focused just on the schools that Williams College listed as its overlap schools. If you think that 52% of those accepted to Williams and any of Harvard, Yale, Princeton, and Stanford are selectig Williams,you are engaging in wishful thinking--not reality.
And yet the yield numbers suggest that a Willliams admit making that choice with respect to its overlap schools is significantly more likely than an Emory admit choosing Emory over its respective overlap schools (which are themselves less selective than the Williams overlap schools).
Williams is competing with other LACs not Unis, especially not HYP. Here are Williams peer schools. The only university was Trinity college. You're delusional.
https://www.chronicle.com/article/who-does-your-college-think-its-peers-are?cid2=gen_login_refresh&cid=gen_sign_in
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:https://www.collegeevaluator.com/rankings/highest-admission-yield/
Williams yield: #28, 52% yield (9% acceptance rate)
Emory yield: #92, 34% yield (13% acceptance rate)
Williams is more of a "first choice" than Emory.
Great information, but I think that you may have missed the point of my earlier post.
My earlier post focused just on the schools that Williams College listed as its overlap schools. If you think that 52% of those accepted to Williams and any of Harvard, Yale, Princeton, and Stanford are selectig Williams,you are engaging in wishful thinking--not reality.
And yet the yield numbers suggest that a Willliams admit making that choice with respect to its overlap schools is significantly more likely than an Emory admit choosing Emory over its respective overlap schools (which are themselves less selective than the Williams overlap schools).
Williams is competing with other LACs not Unis, especially not HYP. Here are Williams peer schools. The only university was Trinity college. You're delusional.
https://www.chronicle.com/article/who-does-your-college-think-its-peers-are?cid2=gen_login_refresh&cid=gen_sign_in
PP listed HYP as Williams overlap schools, not me.
Williams College listed their overlap schools as: Amherst, Brown, Dartmouth, Harvard, Yale, Middlebury, Princeton, & Stanford.
Again, the source for this list is Williams College.
Amherst College lists their overlap schools as: Williams, Middlebury, Colby, Yale, Brown, Harvard, Princeton, & Stanford.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:https://www.collegeevaluator.com/rankings/highest-admission-yield/
Williams yield: #28, 52% yield (9% acceptance rate)
Emory yield: #92, 34% yield (13% acceptance rate)
Williams is more of a "first choice" than Emory.
Great information, but I think that you may have missed the point of my earlier post.
My earlier post focused just on the schools that Williams College listed as its overlap schools. If you think that 52% of those accepted to Williams and any of Harvard, Yale, Princeton, and Stanford are selectig Williams,you are engaging in wishful thinking--not reality.
And yet the yield numbers suggest that a Willliams admit making that choice with respect to its overlap schools is significantly more likely than an Emory admit choosing Emory over its respective overlap schools (which are themselves less selective than the Williams overlap schools).
Williams is competing with other LACs not Unis, especially not HYP. Here are Williams peer schools. The only university was Trinity college. You're delusional.
https://www.chronicle.com/article/who-does-your-college-think-its-peers-are?cid2=gen_login_refresh&cid=gen_sign_in
PP listed HYP as Williams overlap schools, not me.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:https://www.collegeevaluator.com/rankings/highest-admission-yield/
Williams yield: #28, 52% yield (9% acceptance rate)
Emory yield: #92, 34% yield (13% acceptance rate)
Williams is more of a "first choice" than Emory.
Great information, but I think that you may have missed the point of my earlier post.
My earlier post focused just on the schools that Williams College listed as its overlap schools. If you think that 52% of those accepted to Williams and any of Harvard, Yale, Princeton, and Stanford are selectig Williams,you are engaging in wishful thinking--not reality.
And yet the yield numbers suggest that a Willliams admit making that choice with respect to its overlap schools is significantly more likely than an Emory admit choosing Emory over its respective overlap schools (which are themselves less selective than the Williams overlap schools).
Williams is competing with other LACs not Unis, especially not HYP. Here are Williams peer schools. The only university was Trinity college. You're delusional.
https://www.chronicle.com/article/who-does-your-college-think-its-peers-are?cid2=gen_login_refresh&cid=gen_sign_in
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:https://www.collegeevaluator.com/rankings/highest-admission-yield/
Williams yield: #28, 52% yield (9% acceptance rate)
Emory yield: #92, 34% yield (13% acceptance rate)
Williams is more of a "first choice" than Emory.
Great information, but I think that you may have missed the point of my earlier post.
My earlier post focused just on the schools that Williams College listed as its overlap schools. If you think that 52% of those accepted to Williams and any of Harvard, Yale, Princeton, and Stanford are selectig Williams,you are engaging in wishful thinking--not reality.
And yet the yield numbers suggest that a Willliams admit making that choice with respect to its overlap schools is significantly more likely than an Emory admit choosing Emory over its respective overlap schools (which are themselves less selective than the Williams overlap schools).
Williams is competing with other LACs not Unis, especially not HYP. Here are Williams peer schools. The only university was Trinity college. You're delusional.
https://www.chronicle.com/article/who-does-your-college-think-its-peers-are?cid2=gen_login_refresh&cid=gen_sign_in
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:https://www.collegeevaluator.com/rankings/highest-admission-yield/
Williams yield: #28, 52% yield (9% acceptance rate)
Emory yield: #92, 34% yield (13% acceptance rate)
Williams is more of a "first choice" than Emory.
Great information, but I think that you may have missed the point of my earlier post.
My earlier post focused just on the schools that Williams College listed as its overlap schools. If you think that 52% of those accepted to Williams and any of Harvard, Yale, Princeton, and Stanford are selectig Williams,you are engaging in wishful thinking--not reality.
And yet the yield numbers suggest that a Willliams admit making that choice with respect to its overlap schools is significantly more likely than an Emory admit choosing Emory over its respective overlap schools (which are themselves less selective than the Williams overlap schools).
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Is Emory anyone's first choice?
https://college.emory.edu/scholars/
Ahh...so if they pay people to go there, Emory is a first choice. Got it.
Don't understand why PP posted the Emory scholars link as it didn't make sense to the initial question. Either way 55% of Emory students are ED so those students clearly has it as their first choice. Same as Williams.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:https://www.collegeevaluator.com/rankings/highest-admission-yield/
Williams yield: #28, 52% yield (9% acceptance rate)
Emory yield: #92, 34% yield (13% acceptance rate)
Williams is more of a "first choice" than Emory.
Great information, but I think that you may have missed the point of my earlier post.
My earlier post focused just on the schools that Williams College listed as its overlap schools. If you think that 52% of those accepted to Williams and any of Harvard, Yale, Princeton, and Stanford are selectig Williams,you are engaging in wishful thinking--not reality.
And yet the yield numbers suggest that a Willliams admit making that choice with respect to its overlap schools is significantly more likely than an Emory admit choosing Emory over its respective overlap schools (which are themselves less selective than the Williams overlap schools).