Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Traditional B1G publics with the fewest in-state students:
1. Michigan (~54%)
2. Penn State (~58%)
3. (tie) Wisconsin, Purdue & Indiana (~62-63%)
4. Minnesota (~66%)
5. (tie) Illinois, Ohio State, UMD (~75%)
The others are all around 80% in-state or higher. Rutgers looks to be the highest at 90%+.
Purdue is 40% instate
Not according to College Factual, which is where these numbers are from. Stats are for undergrad only, which might account for the difference.
https://www.collegefactual.com/colleges/purdue-university-main-campus/student-life/diversity/chart-geographic-breakdown.html
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My DD initially was focused on going to an OOS state school. In the end she was really worried that the place she liked the most would be a back up for the in-state students (who are 80%) were compelled to attend bc of cost. I think this was in part bc she was offered honors/merit at our in state school and felt this way herself but really wanted to go away. She wound up at a private school which wasn’t what she had originally planned.
what an incredibly snobby and entitled child you raised
Np. I kind of get it because my daughter was so happy to go to her first choice but was kind of bummed that all of her friends had been rejected by their top ivy/elite choice so they always had a chip on their shoulders about never being totally happy with their school.
Not a big deal, of course, but real.
It’s delusional to believe that the in-state kids at the state flagship have a chip on their shoulders! You people REALLY need to get out of your bubbles.
It's actually.. not that crazy of a thought. You don't think there are in-state kids at somewhere like Michigan that got into private schools and didn't attend due to cost that are peeved about it?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My DD initially was focused on going to an OOS state school. In the end she was really worried that the place she liked the most would be a back up for the in-state students (who are 80%) were compelled to attend bc of cost. I think this was in part bc she was offered honors/merit at our in state school and felt this way herself but really wanted to go away. She wound up at a private school which wasn’t what she had originally planned.
what an incredibly snobby and entitled child you raised
Np. I kind of get it because my daughter was so happy to go to her first choice but was kind of bummed that all of her friends had been rejected by their top ivy/elite choice so they always had a chip on their shoulders about never being totally happy with their school.
Not a big deal, of course, but real.
It’s delusional to believe that the in-state kids at the state flagship have a chip on their shoulders! You people REALLY need to get out of your bubbles.
It's actually.. not that crazy of a thought. You don't think there are in-state kids at somewhere like Michigan that got into private schools and didn't attend due to cost that are peeved about it?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Traditional B1G publics with the fewest in-state students:
1. Michigan (~54%)
2. Penn State (~58%)
3. (tie) Wisconsin, Purdue & Indiana (~62-63%)
4. Minnesota (~66%)
5. (tie) Illinois, Ohio State, UMD (~75%)
The others are all around 80% in-state or higher. Rutgers looks to be the highest at 90%+.
Purdue is 40% instate
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My DD initially was focused on going to an OOS state school. In the end she was really worried that the place she liked the most would be a back up for the in-state students (who are 80%) were compelled to attend bc of cost. I think this was in part bc she was offered honors/merit at our in state school and felt this way herself but really wanted to go away. She wound up at a private school which wasn’t what she had originally planned.
what an incredibly snobby and entitled child you raised
Np. I kind of get it because my daughter was so happy to go to her first choice but was kind of bummed that all of her friends had been rejected by their top ivy/elite choice so they always had a chip on their shoulders about never being totally happy with their school.
Not a big deal, of course, but real.
It’s delusional to believe that the in-state kids at the state flagship have a chip on their shoulders! You people REALLY need to get out of your bubbles.
It's actually.. not that crazy of a thought. You don't think there are in-state kids at somewhere like Michigan that got into private schools and didn't attend due to cost that are peeved about it?
Anonymous wrote:Traditional B1G publics with the fewest in-state students:
1. Michigan (~54%)
2. Penn State (~58%)
3. (tie) Wisconsin, Purdue & Indiana (~62-63%)
4. Minnesota (~66%)
5. (tie) Illinois, Ohio State, UMD (~75%)
The others are all around 80% in-state or higher. Rutgers looks to be the highest at 90%+.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My DD initially was focused on going to an OOS state school. In the end she was really worried that the place she liked the most would be a back up for the in-state students (who are 80%) were compelled to attend bc of cost. I think this was in part bc she was offered honors/merit at our in state school and felt this way herself but really wanted to go away. She wound up at a private school which wasn’t what she had originally planned.
what an incredibly snobby and entitled child you raised
Np. I kind of get it because my daughter was so happy to go to her first choice but was kind of bummed that all of her friends had been rejected by their top ivy/elite choice so they always had a chip on their shoulders about never being totally happy with their school.
Not a big deal, of course, but real.
It’s delusional to believe that the in-state kids at the state flagship have a chip on their shoulders! You people REALLY need to get out of your bubbles.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My DD initially was focused on going to an OOS state school. In the end she was really worried that the place she liked the most would be a back up for the in-state students (who are 80%) were compelled to attend bc of cost. I think this was in part bc she was offered honors/merit at our in state school and felt this way herself but really wanted to go away. She wound up at a private school which wasn’t what she had originally planned.
what an incredibly snobby and entitled child you raised
Np. I kind of get it because my daughter was so happy to go to her first choice but was kind of bummed that all of her friends had been rejected by their top ivy/elite choice so they always had a chip on their shoulders about never being totally happy with their school.
Not a big deal, of course, but real.
Yes that was what she was encountering. She was meeting people who were a little disappointed to be going to their state flagship even though she had been excited. She would have paid full oos tuition for the same thing they were all getting for free. This wasn’t the only issue. She also just started feeling that it wasn’t a great fit culturally and part of that was that it had such a high percentage of in state. There were academic reasons she ultimately preferred the private college as well.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:UofSC. There are some small circles of "Charleston Blue Bloods" but the majority of the school is geographically diverse and there is plenty to do.
I’ve heard that school is tough socially if you don’t go Greek or don’t join the Christian groups.
Anonymous wrote:DC’s friend is miserable at Wisconsin. Rushed and said they were told OOS rich kids from the East Coast not welcome. DC is at Berkeley and it’s very accepting of OOS students.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My DD initially was focused on going to an OOS state school. In the end she was really worried that the place she liked the most would be a back up for the in-state students (who are 80%) were compelled to attend bc of cost. I think this was in part bc she was offered honors/merit at our in state school and felt this way herself but really wanted to go away. She wound up at a private school which wasn’t what she had originally planned.
what an incredibly snobby and entitled child you raised
Np. I kind of get it because my daughter was so happy to go to her first choice but was kind of bummed that all of her friends had been rejected by their top ivy/elite choice so they always had a chip on their shoulders about never being totally happy with their school.
Not a big deal, of course, but real.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My DD initially was focused on going to an OOS state school. In the end she was really worried that the place she liked the most would be a back up for the in-state students (who are 80%) were compelled to attend bc of cost. I think this was in part bc she was offered honors/merit at our in state school and felt this way herself but really wanted to go away. She wound up at a private school which wasn’t what she had originally planned.
what an incredibly snobby and entitled child you raised