What a bunch of drivel-totally false at our private. Have to be top 10% and max rigor to have a ghost of a chance plus ED.Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Embargoed means it still has time to change right? I think a more reasonable list would go:
1. Princeton
2. MIT
3. Harvard
3. Stanford
5. Yale
6. Caltech
6. Duke
8. Johns Hopkins
8. Northwestern
10. Penn
Well sheeit, if we're going to do that then I'd say:
1. MIT
2. Stanford
3. Harvard
3. Cal Tech
5. Princeton
6. Duke
6. Johns Hopkins
8. Yale
8. Penn
10. Brown
We found the Brown alum who was rejected by Northwestern !
Kids at Brown don't care about Northwestern.
Oh but they do. For finance bros and stem kids, Brown is seen as an easier admit and not as good as Northwestern—so many kids who get deferred or rejected from ED at Penn Wharton or engineering or M&T(insanely popular among males from wealthy families) “settle” for Brown or Dartmouth in RD, and often do not get into Northwestern RD but would prefer it over Brown if they did.
The theory that people want to attend Penn or Northwestern way more than Brown or Dartmouth is not really supported by data.
Regular decision acceptance rate
4.0% Brown
4.4% Penn
4.5% Dartmouth
5.5% Northwestern
Regular decision yield
53.0% Penn
49.8% Dartmouth
45.0% Brown
36.5% Northwestern
None of that dispels his theory. It suggests they arent even getting into Northwestern which for finance might be true.
At our private school, the kids that attend Dartmouth and Brown are overwhelmingly ranked higher than kids that attend Northwestern. They can easily get into Northwestern.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Does anyone else think it is weird that Hopkins is tied with Caltech?
Hopkins offers so much opportunity, so I don't think it's weird. The US Gov backs a truck of research money into their yard every year.
And have you been on that campus lately? Thanks, Bloomberg.
NP. I have and also find it weird it’s in the top 10. Did they pay or something?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Does anyone else think it is weird that Hopkins is tied with Caltech?
Hopkins offers so much opportunity, so I don't think it's weird. The US Gov backs a truck of research money into their yard every year.
And have you been on that campus lately? Thanks, Bloomberg.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Does anyone else think it is weird that Hopkins is tied with Caltech?
Why not Northwestern or Duke by that same token?
I mean Hopkins has humanities and is way more well rounded than Caltech
But it is no match for Caltech at what Caltech excels at
so what? Hopkins is higher ranked than most of the other top 10 for engineering and stem. And it wildly outranks caltech at social sciences and humanities.
You want to rank the top 10 Hopkins humanities department by itself?
So Caltech is better at everything it does than Hopkins.
not in bioengineering, biology, and anything medical related.
Caltech is better in biology and chemistry and physics and doesn't have a medical school.
Wrong
https://www.niche.com/colleges/search/best-colleges-for-biology/
https://www.niche.com/colleges/search/best-colleges-for-math/
Niche? USNEWS has Caltech higher for biology, math, chemistry, physics. . .
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Does anyone else think it is weird that Hopkins is tied with Caltech?
Why not Northwestern or Duke by that same token?
I mean Hopkins has humanities and is way more well rounded than Caltech
But it is no match for Caltech at what Caltech excels at
so what? Hopkins is higher ranked than most of the other top 10 for engineering and stem. And it wildly outranks caltech at social sciences and humanities.
You want to rank the top 10 Hopkins humanities department by itself?
So Caltech is better at everything it does than Hopkins.
not in bioengineering, biology, and anything medical related.
Caltech is better in biology and chemistry and physics and doesn't have a medical school.
Wrong
https://www.niche.com/colleges/search/best-colleges-for-biology/
https://www.niche.com/colleges/search/best-colleges-for-math/
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Embargoed means it still has time to change right? I think a more reasonable list would go:
1. Princeton
2. MIT
3. Harvard
3. Stanford
5. Yale
6. Caltech
6. Duke
8. Johns Hopkins
8. Northwestern
10. Penn
Well sheeit, if we're going to do that then I'd say:
1. MIT
2. Stanford
3. Harvard
3. Cal Tech
5. Princeton
6. Duke
6. Johns Hopkins
8. Yale
8. Penn
10. Brown
We found the Brown alum who was rejected by Northwestern !
Kids at Brown don't care about Northwestern.
Oh but they do. For finance bros and stem kids, Brown is seen as an easier admit and not as good as Northwestern—so many kids who get deferred or rejected from ED at Penn Wharton or engineering or M&T(insanely popular among males from wealthy families) “settle” for Brown or Dartmouth in RD, and often do not get into Northwestern RD but would prefer it over Brown if they did.
The theory that people want to attend Penn or Northwestern way more than Brown or Dartmouth is not really supported by data.
Regular decision acceptance rate
4.0% Brown
4.4% Penn
4.5% Dartmouth
5.5% Northwestern
Regular decision yield
53.0% Penn
49.8% Dartmouth
45.0% Brown
36.5% Northwestern
None of that dispels his theory. It suggests they arent even getting into Northwestern which for finance might be true.
At our private school, the kids that attend Dartmouth and Brown are overwhelmingly ranked higher than kids that attend Northwestern. They can easily get into Northwestern.
DP. Interesting. At our West Coast private school, NU would be the overwhelming pick over Dartmouth. More head to head with Brown.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Does anyone else think it is weird that Hopkins is tied with Caltech?
Why not Northwestern or Duke by that same token?
I mean Hopkins has humanities and is way more well rounded than Caltech
But it is no match for Caltech at what Caltech excels at
so what? Hopkins is higher ranked than most of the other top 10 for engineering and stem. And it wildly outranks caltech at social sciences and humanities.
You want to rank the top 10 Hopkins humanities department by itself?
So Caltech is better at everything it does than Hopkins.
not in bioengineering, biology, and anything medical related.
Caltech is better in biology and chemistry and physics and doesn't have a medical school.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Embargoed means it still has time to change right? I think a more reasonable list would go:
1. Princeton
2. MIT
3. Harvard
3. Stanford
5. Yale
6. Caltech
6. Duke
8. Johns Hopkins
8. Northwestern
10. Penn
Well sheeit, if we're going to do that then I'd say:
1. MIT
2. Stanford
3. Harvard
3. Cal Tech
5. Princeton
6. Duke
6. Johns Hopkins
8. Yale
8. Penn
10. Brown
We found the Brown alum who was rejected by Northwestern !
Kids at Brown don't care about Northwestern.
Oh but they do. For finance bros and stem kids, Brown is seen as an easier admit and not as good as Northwestern—so many kids who get deferred or rejected from ED at Penn Wharton or engineering or M&T(insanely popular among males from wealthy families) “settle” for Brown or Dartmouth in RD, and often do not get into Northwestern RD but would prefer it over Brown if they did.
The theory that people want to attend Penn or Northwestern way more than Brown or Dartmouth is not really supported by data.
Regular decision acceptance rate
4.0% Brown
4.4% Penn
4.5% Dartmouth
5.5% Northwestern
Regular decision yield
53.0% Penn
49.8% Dartmouth
45.0% Brown
36.5% Northwestern
This is interesting information.
RD yield is lower at Northwestern because almost all NU RD admits have very elite East Coast options. Unless exposed to the Chicago area (Chicago is the nation's third largest city), many do not realize what an incredible location NU has. And Chicago is easily accessed and is a great city. Also, the weather deters some.
UPenn does well due to the Wharton School of Business which is the best in the country and probably the best in the world.
Again, thank you for posting the information. If I may ask, what is your source ? TIA
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Embargoed means it still has time to change right? I think a more reasonable list would go:
1. Princeton
2. MIT
3. Harvard
3. Stanford
5. Yale
6. Caltech
6. Duke
8. Johns Hopkins
8. Northwestern
10. Penn
Well sheeit, if we're going to do that then I'd say:
1. MIT
2. Stanford
3. Harvard
3. Cal Tech
5. Princeton
6. Duke
6. Johns Hopkins
8. Yale
8. Penn
10. Brown
We found the Brown alum who was rejected by Northwestern !
Kids at Brown don't care about Northwestern.
Oh but they do. For finance bros and stem kids, Brown is seen as an easier admit and not as good as Northwestern—so many kids who get deferred or rejected from ED at Penn Wharton or engineering or M&T(insanely popular among males from wealthy families) “settle” for Brown or Dartmouth in RD, and often do not get into Northwestern RD but would prefer it over Brown if they did.
The theory that people want to attend Penn or Northwestern way more than Brown or Dartmouth is not really supported by data.
Regular decision acceptance rate
4.0% Brown
4.4% Penn
4.5% Dartmouth
5.5% Northwestern
Regular decision yield
53.0% Penn
49.8% Dartmouth
45.0% Brown
36.5% Northwestern
This is interesting information.
RD yield is lower at Northwestern because almost all NU RD admits have very elite East Coast options. Unless exposed to the Chicago area (Chicago is the nation's third largest city), many do not realize what an incredible location NU has. And Chicago is easily accessed and is a great city. Also, the weather deters some.
UPenn does well due to the Wharton School of Business which is the best in the country and probably the best in the world.
Again, thank you for posting the information. If I may ask, what is your source ? TIA
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Does anyone else think it is weird that Hopkins is tied with Caltech?
Why not Northwestern or Duke by that same token?
I mean Hopkins has humanities and is way more well rounded than Caltech
But it is no match for Caltech at what Caltech excels at
so what? Hopkins is higher ranked than most of the other top 10 for engineering and stem. And it wildly outranks caltech at social sciences and humanities.
You want to rank the top 10 Hopkins humanities department by itself?
So Caltech is better at everything it does than Hopkins.
not in bioengineering, biology, and anything medical related.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Embargoed means it still has time to change right? I think a more reasonable list would go:
1. Princeton
2. MIT
3. Harvard
3. Stanford
5. Yale
6. Caltech
6. Duke
8. Johns Hopkins
8. Northwestern
10. Penn
Well sheeit, if we're going to do that then I'd say:
1. MIT
2. Stanford
3. Harvard
3. Cal Tech
5. Princeton
6. Duke
6. Johns Hopkins
8. Yale
8. Penn
10. Brown
We found the Brown alum who was rejected by Northwestern !
Kids at Brown don't care about Northwestern.
Oh but they do. For finance bros and stem kids, Brown is seen as an easier admit and not as good as Northwestern—so many kids who get deferred or rejected from ED at Penn Wharton or engineering or M&T(insanely popular among males from wealthy families) “settle” for Brown or Dartmouth in RD, and often do not get into Northwestern RD but would prefer it over Brown if they did.
The theory that people want to attend Penn or Northwestern way more than Brown or Dartmouth is not really supported by data.
Regular decision acceptance rate
4.0% Brown
4.4% Penn
4.5% Dartmouth
5.5% Northwestern
Regular decision yield
53.0% Penn
49.8% Dartmouth
45.0% Brown
36.5% Northwestern
None of that dispels his theory. It suggests they arent even getting into Northwestern which for finance might be true.
At our private school, the kids that attend Dartmouth and Brown are overwhelmingly ranked higher than kids that attend Northwestern. They can easily get into Northwestern.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Embargoed means it still has time to change right? I think a more reasonable list would go:
1. Princeton
2. MIT
3. Harvard
3. Stanford
5. Yale
6. Caltech
6. Duke
8. Johns Hopkins
8. Northwestern
10. Penn
Well sheeit, if we're going to do that then I'd say:
1. MIT
2. Stanford
3. Harvard
3. Cal Tech
5. Princeton
6. Duke
6. Johns Hopkins
8. Yale
8. Penn
10. Brown
We found the Brown alum who was rejected by Northwestern !
Kids at Brown don't care about Northwestern.
Oh but they do. For finance bros and stem kids, Brown is seen as an easier admit and not as good as Northwestern—so many kids who get deferred or rejected from ED at Penn Wharton or engineering or M&T(insanely popular among males from wealthy families) “settle” for Brown or Dartmouth in RD, and often do not get into Northwestern RD but would prefer it over Brown if they did.
The theory that people want to attend Penn or Northwestern way more than Brown or Dartmouth is not really supported by data.
Regular decision acceptance rate
4.0% Brown
4.4% Penn
4.5% Dartmouth
5.5% Northwestern
Regular decision yield
53.0% Penn
49.8% Dartmouth
45.0% Brown
36.5% Northwestern
None of that dispels his theory. It suggests they arent even getting into Northwestern which for finance might be true.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Embargoed means it still has time to change right? I think a more reasonable list would go:
1. Princeton
2. MIT
3. Harvard
3. Stanford
5. Yale
6. Caltech
6. Duke
8. Johns Hopkins
8. Northwestern
10. Penn
Well sheeit, if we're going to do that then I'd say:
1. MIT
2. Stanford
3. Harvard
3. Cal Tech
5. Princeton
6. Duke
6. Johns Hopkins
8. Yale
8. Penn
10. Brown
We found the Brown alum who was rejected by Northwestern !
Kids at Brown don't care about Northwestern.
Oh but they do. For finance bros and stem kids, Brown is seen as an easier admit and not as good as Northwestern—so many kids who get deferred or rejected from ED at Penn Wharton or engineering or M&T(insanely popular among males from wealthy families) “settle” for Brown or Dartmouth in RD, and often do not get into Northwestern RD but would prefer it over Brown if they did.