Anonymous wrote:How people can bash Michigan but then go on to praise UVA and UNC is beyond me
Anonymous wrote:How people can bash Michigan but then go on to praise UVA and UNC is beyond me
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Lemme guess… your kid attends Michigan? And this “feat” makes you feel good. I get it. I went to NYU in the late 80s. Had a fantastic experience despite the 70% admit rate or whatever it was. Now all of my kid’s friends think I must have been awesome to attend a school with a single digit admit rate.
Just focus on the education. Kid will do just fine.
It's kind of funny they think this is an achievement when northeastern's acceptance rate of 2.9% is even lower than Harvard lol
Anonymous wrote:What a hobby dcum is
Anonymous wrote:As a fun exercise, given that the acceptance rates have been dropping quickly at the top public universities including UVA, UNC, the UCs, etc., wanted to look into Michigan. They haven't released the official acceptance stats yet, but they did published enrolled students and application volumes, so some guesswork involved here.
In fall of 2023, there was an acceptance rate of 17.9%, based on 15,722 acceptances and 87,632 applications. (https://obp.umich.edu/wp-content/uploads/pubdata/factsfigures/firstyearsprofile_umaa.pdf)
For fall of 2024, the school announced first year applications rose to 98,310 (https://record.umich.edu/articles/u-m-reports-record-enrollment-for-fall-2024/) and 7,278 first-years enrolled (https://obp.umich.edu/wp-content/uploads/pubdata/factsfigures/enrollment_umaa_2024.pdf).
If we assume last year's yield rate of 47.2%, we can assume approximately 15,420 acceptances were handed out, yielding an acceptance rate of 15.7% this year - quite a feat for Umich!
Anonymous wrote:How is it overrated exactly? Look at all of the departments and every.single.one is top 10 in their field of discipline. Haters gonna hate, but OOS have to have top stats and that X factor to get in. I suppose one could criticize its size but some view that as a plus. It’s accomplishing its mission and more and the vast alumni base is worth its weight in gold.
Anonymous wrote:How people can bash Michigan but then go on to praise UVA and UNC is beyond me
Anonymous wrote:Lemme guess… your kid attends Michigan? And this “feat” makes you feel good. I get it. I went to NYU in the late 80s. Had a fantastic experience despite the 70% admit rate or whatever it was. Now all of my kid’s friends think I must have been awesome to attend a school with a single digit admit rate.
Just focus on the education. Kid will do just fine.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Michigan supporters on DCUM go out of their way to put down other schools, and don't recognize that their is a need for different types of schools. That is what bugs me.
You mean like the supporters who constantly say it’s overrated?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:As a fun exercise, given that the acceptance rates have been dropping quickly at the top public universities including UVA, UNC, the UCs, etc., wanted to look into Michigan. They haven't released the official acceptance stats yet, but they did published enrolled students and application volumes, so some guesswork involved here.
In fall of 2023, there was an acceptance rate of 17.9%, based on 15,722 acceptances and 87,632 applications. (https://obp.umich.edu/wp-content/uploads/pubdata/factsfigures/firstyearsprofile_umaa.pdf)
For fall of 2024, the school announced first year applications rose to 98,310 (https://record.umich.edu/articles/u-m-reports-record-enrollment-for-fall-2024/) and 7,278 first-years enrolled (https://obp.umich.edu/wp-content/uploads/pubdata/factsfigures/enrollment_umaa_2024.pdf).
If we assume last year's yield rate of 47.2%, we can assume approximately 15,420 acceptances were handed out, yielding an acceptance rate of 15.7% this year - quite a feat for Umich!
After reading about their DEI debacle, i will have nothing to do with them. No donations, no support.
The rebuttal has already come out. Some factually incorrect reporting.
https://michiganchronicle.com/dr-tabbye-chavous-a-battle-for-truth-setting-the-record-straight-on-dei-at-u-m/
The amount cited ($250M over 8 years) includes funding for low-income state students based solely on household income. One estimate I found was about $20M in one year. So maybe $160M of that is scholarships.
We get you PP. People who don't like to share, don't share. You won't be missed.