Anonymous wrote:Regular Decision Yields (% of students admitted RD who choose to attend) of top 5 SLACs:
Pomona- 43.4%
Williams- 39%
Wellesley- 31.8%
Amherst- 29.7%
Swarthmore- 28.2%
Regular Decision Yields (% of students admitted RD who choose to attend) of selected top universities:
Dartmouth- 51.7%
Brown- 46.5%
Carnegie Mellon- 33.8%
Vanderbilt- 29.4%
Emory- 18.7%
So the Ivies do better but the yields are similar to other top 30 universities?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I have worked at multiple big name consulting firms and we prefer SLAC graduates over big universities including Ivies. SLAC kids tend to have better writing and communication/storytelling skills - not for every industry but certainly preferred in our line of work.
So you prefer LAC kids over Ivy League graduates because the LAC kids are better bs artists. LAC kids are better bs artists because they lack hard skills as humanities majors.
The above post is total bs as anyone can view the school backgrounds of management consulting firms.
Ignorant much? SLACs offer degrees in CS, math, physics, chem, bio, econ, etc. Their graduates just have a much broader education than their counterparts. And, these students typically enjoy much closer relationships with their professors because the class sizes are limited to approx. 30 students.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I have worked at multiple big name consulting firms and we prefer SLAC graduates over big universities including Ivies. SLAC kids tend to have better writing and communication/storytelling skills - not for every industry but certainly preferred in our line of work.
So you prefer LAC kids over Ivy League graduates because the LAC kids are better bs artists. LAC kids are better bs artists because they lack hard skills as humanities majors.
The above post is total bs as anyone can view the school backgrounds of management consulting firms.
Anonymous wrote:I have worked at multiple big name consulting firms and we prefer SLAC graduates over big universities including Ivies. SLAC kids tend to have better writing and communication/storytelling skills - not for every industry but certainly preferred in our line of work.
Anonymous wrote:I have worked at multiple big name consulting firms and we prefer SLAC graduates over big universities including Ivies. SLAC kids tend to have better writing and communication/storytelling skills - not for every industry but certainly preferred in our line of work.
Anonymous wrote:I have worked at multiple big name consulting firms and we prefer SLAC graduates over big universities including Ivies. SLAC kids tend to have better writing and communication/storytelling skills - not for every industry but certainly preferred in our line of work.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I have worked at multiple big name consulting firms and we prefer SLAC graduates over big universities including Ivies. SLAC kids tend to have better writing and communication/storytelling skills - not for every industry but certainly preferred in our line of work.
This is an interesting comment!
Anonymous wrote:I have worked at multiple big name consulting firms and we prefer SLAC graduates over big universities including Ivies. SLAC kids tend to have better writing and communication/storytelling skills - not for every industry but certainly preferred in our line of work.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Why are kids even applying to SLACS then?
Colgate had something like 22000 applicants this year. A few years ago it was 9000.
Why are kids applying to 10+ schools period? They are casting a wide net.
Anonymous wrote:This is my kid. Ivy vs state flagship, sure pick ivy. But slac vs state flagship. Nope.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Sad? The truth is that SLACS, especially cold, rural ones, are out of style. They have no lay name recognition and are absurdly expensive with no opportunity to live off-campus later to save $.
Hmm. You must be right. I guess that's why the top SLACs have admit rates of under 10% and 1500+ SAT scores.
Those places still manage to fill their classes every year with very, very strong students.