Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Has anyone noticed that some of the best (but not “very best”) public universities still have high acceptance rates in 2025?
Two of the most shocking are Illinois and Washington, some of the best research stem schools with global brands, but the acceptance rate is 40%.
UT Austin’s acceptance rate is 30%, and had many great departments across the board, most of which match or surpass UVa/UNC
Wisconsin is the most shocking of all, with a 40% acceptance rate, despite a distinguished history.
If you put any of these “A-“ publics up against privates such as Vanderbilt or Washu, they are academically competitive but the acceptance rate for the ladder two are much lower.
UT oos admit rate is about 5%. Way tougher oos admit than UVA, Michigan, or the Cal schools…
Who cares...their overall is over 30%.
Don’t be an idiot. In state accounts for 80% of the admitted students. And guess what you knucklehead. 90% of those are kids in the top 6% of their Texas HS. If you are not , then you are most likely not applying to UT. OMG…
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If you are not from Texas your chances to being admitted to UT’s Business School is slim to none. My kid was accepted to Wharton, UC Berkeley and MIT and denied at UT. 1580/36 3.9 UW
UT definitely would have been more fun than the others.
Anonymous wrote:If you are not from Texas your chances to being admitted to UT’s Business School is slim to none. My kid was accepted to Wharton, UC Berkeley and MIT and denied at UT. 1580/36 3.9 UW
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Has anyone noticed that some of the best (but not “very best”) public universities still have high acceptance rates in 2025?
Two of the most shocking are Illinois and Washington, some of the best research stem schools with global brands, but the acceptance rate is 40%.
UT Austin’s acceptance rate is 30%, and had many great departments across the board, most of which match or surpass UVa/UNC
Wisconsin is the most shocking of all, with a 40% acceptance rate, despite a distinguished history.
If you put any of these “A-“ publics up against privates such as Vanderbilt or Washu, they are academically competitive but the acceptance rate for the ladder two are much lower.
UT oos admit rate is about 5%. Way tougher oos admit than UVA, Michigan, or the Cal schools…
Anonymous wrote:UT Austin is impossible of state. My 2025 kid was admitted to 2 Ivies, 2 other top private schools, UNC, Michigan, and Berkeley (all OOS) and was flat out rejected from Texas. And this was for an obscure humanities major.
I know a bunch of other kids like this.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Has anyone noticed that some of the best (but not “very best”) public universities still have high acceptance rates in 2025?
Two of the most shocking are Illinois and Washington, some of the best research stem schools with global brands, but the acceptance rate is 40%.
UT Austin’s acceptance rate is 30%, and had many great departments across the board, most of which match or surpass UVa/UNC
Wisconsin is the most shocking of all, with a 40% acceptance rate, despite a distinguished history.
If you put any of these “A-“ publics up against privates such as Vanderbilt or Washu, they are academically competitive but the acceptance rate for the ladder two are much lower.
Not relevant for impacted majors. I know in-state kids at Rice, MIT, Princeton who were denied their major at UT McCombs or engineering. And, of course not impressive to the DCUM crowd, Emory, Rhodes, Tulane, and Vanderbilt.
On the other hand, it seems pretty easy to transfer into UT as a sophomore. Know a handful of kids outside of the auto admit who are in at UT from community college, Clemson, DePaul as a sophomore this year. Can't speak to major or school.
Two of those schools are not like the others.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Has anyone noticed that some of the best (but not “very best”) public universities still have high acceptance rates in 2025?
Two of the most shocking are Illinois and Washington, some of the best research stem schools with global brands, but the acceptance rate is 40%.
UT Austin’s acceptance rate is 30%, and had many great departments across the board, most of which match or surpass UVa/UNC
Wisconsin is the most shocking of all, with a 40% acceptance rate, despite a distinguished history.
If you put any of these “A-“ publics up against privates such as Vanderbilt or Washu, they are academically competitive but the acceptance rate for the ladder two are much lower.
Not relevant for impacted majors. I know in-state kids at Rice, MIT, Princeton who were denied their major at UT McCombs or engineering. And, of course not impressive to the DCUM crowd, Emory, Rhodes, Tulane, and Vanderbilt.
On the other hand, it seems pretty easy to transfer into UT as a sophomore. Know a handful of kids outside of the auto admit who are in at UT from community college, Clemson, DePaul as a sophomore this year. Can't speak to major or school.
How did Rhodes get snuck in here? Even Tulane is a stretch.
Anonymous wrote:Has anyone noticed that some of the best (but not “very best”) public universities still have high acceptance rates in 2025?
Two of the most shocking are Illinois and Washington, some of the best research stem schools with global brands, but the acceptance rate is 40%.
UT Austin’s acceptance rate is 30%, and had many great departments across the board, most of which match or surpass UVa/UNC
Wisconsin is the most shocking of all, with a 40% acceptance rate, despite a distinguished history.
If you put any of these “A-“ publics up against privates such as Vanderbilt or Washu, they are academically competitive but the acceptance rate for the ladder two are much lower.
Anonymous wrote:Has anyone noticed that some of the best (but not “very best”) public universities still have high acceptance rates in 2025?
Two of the most shocking are Illinois and Washington, some of the best research stem schools with global brands, but the acceptance rate is 40%.
UT Austin’s acceptance rate is 30%, and had many great departments across the board, most of which match or surpass UVa/UNC
Wisconsin is the most shocking of all, with a 40% acceptance rate, despite a distinguished history.
If you put any of these “A-“ publics up against privates such as Vanderbilt or Washu, they are academically competitive but the acceptance rate for the ladder two are much lower.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Has anyone noticed that some of the best (but not “very best”) public universities still have high acceptance rates in 2025?
Two of the most shocking are Illinois and Washington, some of the best research stem schools with global brands, but the acceptance rate is 40%.
UT Austin’s acceptance rate is 30%, and had many great departments across the board, most of which match or surpass UVa/UNC
Wisconsin is the most shocking of all, with a 40% acceptance rate, despite a distinguished history.
If you put any of these “A-“ publics up against privates such as Vanderbilt or Washu, they are academically competitive but the acceptance rate for the ladder two are much lower.
Not relevant for impacted majors. I know in-state kids at Rice, MIT, Princeton who were denied their major at UT McCombs or engineering. And, of course not impressive to the DCUM crowd, Emory, Rhodes, Tulane, and Vanderbilt.
On the other hand, it seems pretty easy to transfer into UT as a sophomore. Know a handful of kids outside of the auto admit who are in at UT from community college, Clemson, DePaul as a sophomore this year. Can't speak to major or school.
Two of those schools are not like the others.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Has anyone noticed that some of the best (but not “very best”) public universities still have high acceptance rates in 2025?
Two of the most shocking are Illinois and Washington, some of the best research stem schools with global brands, but the acceptance rate is 40%.
UT Austin’s acceptance rate is 30%, and had many great departments across the board, most of which match or surpass UVa/UNC
Wisconsin is the most shocking of all, with a 40% acceptance rate, despite a distinguished history.
If you put any of these “A-“ publics up against privates such as Vanderbilt or Washu, they are academically competitive but the acceptance rate for the ladder two are much lower.
Not relevant for impacted majors. I know in-state kids at Rice, MIT, Princeton who were denied their major at UT McCombs or engineering. And, of course not impressive to the DCUM crowd, Emory, Rhodes, Tulane, and Vanderbilt.
On the other hand, it seems pretty easy to transfer into UT as a sophomore. Know a handful of kids outside of the auto admit who are in at UT from community college, Clemson, DePaul as a sophomore this year. Can't speak to major or school.