Anonymous wrote:So much of the discussion I see happening here are anecdotes, so I wanted to see what the #s were based on hard data. These are the results from https://bethesdamagazine.com/2025/09/10/mcps-students-college/ which tracks college acceptances across the top publics in Montgomery County. Stats for select public universities, ordering based on acceptance rate highest to lowest:
University of Maryland, College Park
32.4% acceptance rate, 43% yield
University of Wisconsin
26.4% acceptance rate, 30% yield
Berkeley
14.7% acceptance rate, 32% yield
UVA
12.5% acceptance rate, 24% yield
UMich
12.4% acceptance rate, 45% yield
UNC
11.6% acceptance rate, 24% yield
UCLA
11.3% acceptance rate, 28% yield
UT, Austin
7.8% acceptance rate, 33% yield
My thoughts here:
1) Didn't realize UMCP now has a 33% acceptance rate, even considering this is in-state!
2) Not surprised by low acceptance rates for UNC, UCLA, UT-Austin given their limit on out-of-state, but was surprised to see Berkeley's acceptance rate higher than UVA/UMich.
3) UVA's yield is very low, maybe this is a bias between going OOS to Virginia, when Maryland is the in-state school?
4) Michigan has a very high yield relative to other top publics, students really love this school apparently
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I think this is self reported data so…
This data was supplied by the Montgomery County Public Schools Office of Shared Accountability and high school counselors, based on self-reported information.
Better than noting and most sources since this is from counselors and a data office.
Yes, but if you know an individual school, you can spot certain errors. The results are based on surveys of the graduating seniors through Naviance, and some mistakes are inevitable. For example, my student applied to Pitt through Pitt's own app and did not require the school to do anything, and therefore that application and acceptance to Pitt was not recorded.
Anonymous wrote:UVA
12.5% acceptance rate, 24% yield
UMich
12.4% acceptance rate, 45% yield
“That’s because whatever stats this “magazine” uses is wrong. UVA’s yield is 40-45%. Google it.”
The pp was talking about the yield rate for only the top publics in Montgomery county so overall yield rates are not applicable here. Even with ED to help booster yield at UVA, Michigan’s yield rate was much higher.
Anonymous wrote:To clarify: the Bethesda magazine tracks *Bethesda area publics* not “top publics.”
Anonymous wrote:To clarify: the Bethesda magazine tracks *Bethesda area publics* not “top publics.”
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I think this is self reported data so…
This data was supplied by the Montgomery County Public Schools Office of Shared Accountability and high school counselors, based on self-reported information.
Better than noting and most sources since this is from counselors and a data office.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Emory is horrendous as is Georgetown on a relative basis. Hopkins and Cornell are underrated. I think Hopkins has the most number of applications and strongest yield.
Super interesting that both had higher acceptance rates than UVA/UMich..
Number of applications/ acceptance rate/ yield for popular private schools on DCUM:
Hopkins: 490/5.7%/79%
Penn: 490 / 6.3% / 58%
Cornell 400/10%/64%
Duke 363/6.9%/68%
Georgetown 275/17%/40%
Vandy 226/15%/59%
Emory 249/16.4%/24%
Where is that data from?
Link in first post: https://bethesdamagazine.com/2025/09/10/mcps-students-college/
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I think this is self reported data so…
This data was supplied by the Montgomery County Public Schools Office of Shared Accountability and high school counselors, based on self-reported information.
Better than noting and most sources since this is from counselors and a data office.
Anonymous wrote:Yale, only 4 acceptances, 3 of whom were athletes. So if your child goes high school in MoCo, don't bother applying to Yale.
Anonymous wrote:So much of the discussion I see happening here are anecdotes, so I wanted to see what the #s were based on hard data. These are the results from https://bethesdamagazine.com/2025/09/10/mcps-students-college/ which tracks college acceptances across the top publics in Montgomery County. Stats for select public universities, ordering based on acceptance rate highest to lowest:
University of Maryland, College Park
32.4% acceptance rate, 43% yield
University of Wisconsin
26.4% acceptance rate, 30% yield
Berkeley
14.7% acceptance rate, 32% yield
UVA
12.5% acceptance rate, 24% yield
UMich
12.4% acceptance rate, 45% yield
UNC
11.6% acceptance rate, 24% yield
UCLA
11.3% acceptance rate, 28% yield
UT, Austin
7.8% acceptance rate, 33% yield
My thoughts here:
1) Didn't realize UMCP now has a 33% acceptance rate, even considering this is in-state!
2) Not surprised by low acceptance rates for UNC, UCLA, UT-Austin given their limit on out-of-state, but was surprised to see Berkeley's acceptance rate higher than UVA/UMich.
3) UVA's yield is very low, maybe this is a bias between going OOS to Virginia, when Maryland is the in-state school?
4) Michigan has a very high yield relative to other top publics, students really love this school apparently
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Emory is horrendous as is Georgetown on a relative basis. Hopkins and Cornell are underrated. I think Hopkins has the most number of applications and strongest yield.
Super interesting that both had higher acceptance rates than UVA/UMich..
Number of applications/ acceptance rate/ yield for popular private schools on DCUM:
Hopkins: 490/5.7%/79%
Penn: 490 / 6.3% / 58%
Cornell 400/10%/64%
Duke 363/6.9%/68%
Georgetown 275/17%/40%
Vandy 226/15%/59%
Emory 249/16.4%/24%
Where is that data from?
Anonymous wrote:I think this is self reported data so…