Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Easy to get in Northwestern if you ED.
Several students from DC private got in and attending this fall.
Several = easy.
The ED acceptance rate is 60%.
Where on earth do you people pull numbers like these out of your behind? This is just blatant misinformation.
What is the actual number?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Easy to get in Northwestern if you ED.
Several students from DC private got in and attending this fall.
Several = easy.
The ED acceptance rate is 60%.
Where on earth do you people pull numbers like these out of your behind? This is just blatant misinformation.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Easy to get in Northwestern if you ED.
Several students from DC private got in and attending this fall.
Several = easy.
The ED acceptance rate is 60%.
Where on earth do you people pull numbers like these out of your behind? This is just blatant misinformation.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Easy to get in Northwestern if you ED.
Several students from DC private got in and attending this fall.
Several = easy.
The ED acceptance rate is 60%.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Easy to get in Northwestern if you ED.
Several students from DC private got in and attending this fall.
Several = easy.
Anonymous wrote:fwiw i'd probably be more impressed by an acceptance from Northwestern than one from Cornell. obviously they're both great and anyone would be extremely fortunate to gain admission to either.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Gosh can't this question simply be answered by the admit rates, since the cohort stats are so similar?
And I think they do both admit by college/major, so journalism at NW may be harder than hotel mgmt at Cornell, but CS at C may be harder than same at NW?
No, it isn't that simple.
Cornell admission rates vary by school and--for some schools--varies by whether or not the applicant is a resident of New York state.
Also, admission rates differ for ED versus RD applications.
Don't Northwestern admission rates also vary by school? And also differ for ED vs RD apps? If we get this granular, might as well just work off of the overall acceptance rate.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Gosh can't this question simply be answered by the admit rates, since the cohort stats are so similar?
And I think they do both admit by college/major, so journalism at NW may be harder than hotel mgmt at Cornell, but CS at C may be harder than same at NW?
No, it isn't that simple.
Cornell admission rates vary by school and--for some schools--varies by whether or not the applicant is a resident of New York state.
Also, admission rates differ for ED versus RD applications.
Anonymous wrote:Gosh can't this question simply be answered by the admit rates, since the cohort stats are so similar?
And I think they do both admit by college/major, so journalism at NW may be harder than hotel mgmt at Cornell, but CS at C may be harder than same at NW?
Anonymous wrote:Easy to get in Northwestern if you ED.
Several students from DC private got in and attending this fall.