Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The bashing comes from a lot of us having come of age when Chicago was a “self-selecting” school for quirky types, albeit an academically rigorous one. The low admit rate—pushed artificially even lower by their ED heavy AO—still surprises me. The Obama effect was really something for that school!
NO, concern, not bashing is coming from a lot of educators who are concerned about Chicago’s 6.2 billion in debt loan and the resultant cuts. https://www.forbes.com/sites/michaeltnietzel/2025/08/29/university-of-chicago-announces-it-must-cut-100-million-in-spending/
Anonymous wrote:The bashing comes from a lot of us having come of age when Chicago was a “self-selecting” school for quirky types, albeit an academically rigorous one. The low admit rate—pushed artificially even lower by their ED heavy AO—still surprises me. The Obama effect was really something for that school!
Anonymous wrote:Imagine being so myopic that you think that what kids do at a handful of East Coast private high schools is somehow indicative of whether a college is top or not.
Anonymous wrote:Imagine being so myopic that you think that what kids do at a handful of East Coast private high schools is somehow indicative of whether a college is top or not.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Chicago is the one top15 school that will take kids down to the 50% percentile from top privates. It is also a very, very reliable bet for kids in the top 20% at these same high schools. As such, many kids from these privates will ED1/SCEA an Ivy or other top15 school and then if they don't get in they will ED2 Chicago.
As such, it gets a reputation as a safety school of sorts at these high schools. The gild is off the lily. Few kids get excited by Chicago.
Everyone agrees that it is a fantastic school but it's not one that kids from certain privates get excited by. Also in part because so many kids attend it. At these privates, up to 10% of the class will end up matriculating there.
Stated differently, it ain’t a top 10 school (for undergrad). IYKYK.
I get your point, but, to my surprise, it is currently ranked one spot higher than Northwestern by US News. U Chicago is ranked #5, while Northwestern is ranked at #7 in a tie with Duke, U Penn,and JHU.
Anonymous wrote:Always amused by U Chicago supporters who constantly let others know of their intellectual prowess. Not even clear that U Chicago is the best university in the Chicago area.
I acknowledge that U Chicago's law school is outstanding and its MBA school (Booth), while usually ranked lower than Northwestern-Kellogg, is outstanding.
Not sure, but, if I recall correctly, Northwestern University is ranked higher than U Chicago regarding undergraduate school.
Anonymous wrote:In our ORM community, Chicago is highly respected.
Often parents and kids out of reach for T5 would look into Chicago. Essentially it is the default T6 in practice. Its elite signaling is unambiguous, an ivy plus for sure.
Elite outcomes in: Law. Economics. Academia. Finance. Consulting. Policy.
A weak legacy preference. Extremely high academic intensity. Little emphasis on athletic recruitment. Often rewards exactly the ORM kids' profiles.
Anonymous wrote:Chicago is the one top15 school that will take kids down to the 50% percentile from top privates. It is also a very, very reliable bet for kids in the top 20% at these same high schools. As such, many kids from these privates will ED1/SCEA an Ivy or other top15 school and then if they don't get in they will ED2 Chicago.
As such, it gets a reputation as a safety school of sorts at these high schools. The gild is off the lily. Few kids get excited by Chicago.
Everyone agrees that it is a fantastic school but it's not one that kids from certain privates get excited by. Also in part because so many kids attend it. At these privates, up to 10% of the class will end up matriculating there.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Chicago is the one top15 school that will take kids down to the 50% percentile from top privates. It is also a very, very reliable bet for kids in the top 20% at these same high schools. As such, many kids from these privates will ED1/SCEA an Ivy or other top15 school and then if they don't get in they will ED2 Chicago.
As such, it gets a reputation as a safety school of sorts at these high schools. The gild is off the lily. Few kids get excited by Chicago.
Everyone agrees that it is a fantastic school but it's not one that kids from certain privates get excited by. Also in part because so many kids attend it. At these privates, up to 10% of the class will end up matriculating there.
Stated differently, it ain’t a top 10 school (for undergrad). IYKYK.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Chicago is the one top15 school that will take kids down to the 50% percentile from top privates. It is also a very, very reliable bet for kids in the top 20% at these same high schools. As such, many kids from these privates will ED1/SCEA an Ivy or other top15 school and then if they don't get in they will ED2 Chicago.
As such, it gets a reputation as a safety school of sorts at these high schools. The gild is off the lily. Few kids get excited by Chicago.
Everyone agrees that it is a fantastic school but it's not one that kids from certain privates get excited by. Also in part because so many kids attend it. At these privates, up to 10% of the class will end up matriculating there.
Stated differently, it ain’t a top 10 school (for undergrad). IYKYK.
Anonymous wrote:Chicago is the one top15 school that will take kids down to the 50% percentile from top privates. It is also a very, very reliable bet for kids in the top 20% at these same high schools. As such, many kids from these privates will ED1/SCEA an Ivy or other top15 school and then if they don't get in they will ED2 Chicago.
As such, it gets a reputation as a safety school of sorts at these high schools. The gild is off the lily. Few kids get excited by Chicago.
Everyone agrees that it is a fantastic school but it's not one that kids from certain privates get excited by. Also in part because so many kids attend it. At these privates, up to 10% of the class will end up matriculating there.