Anonymous wrote:All those spitting, swearing, Halloween-hating BLM student protesters must have been a real draw.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I interview for Yale. Reality is that almost every student I interview COULD make it at Yale - only once did I meet an applicant and think WTF? So no-hopers are not being encouraged to apply just to up,the numbers. If you want to know why the numbers are so high, most of the posters on this board need to look in the mirror with their "HYP or bust" philosophies. They have turned their kids into decent candidates through coaching and other enrichment, but it means the odds go down.
+1 smack that
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It's all about enticing students who never have a chance to apply, then claiming a super low admissions rate.
+1. It is a scam
You picked the wrong example to make this point. Do you actually think that Yale believes that its brand is any stronger because acceptance rates drop from 7% to 6%? It actually makes their job more difficult in many ways.
Don't be silly. Acceptance rates are heavily weighted in college rankings. And btw, the acceptance rate isn't 5-6%. It is more like 20-50% for some demographics and 0% for the rest.
Like URMs (especially affluent ones), big donor legacy kids and critical sport recruited athletes.
Must make your life easy to have such a simple view of the world. Easy and convenient thesis.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It's all about enticing students who never have a chance to apply, then claiming a super low admissions rate.
+1. It is a scam
You picked the wrong example to make this point. Do you actually think that Yale believes that its brand is any stronger because acceptance rates drop from 7% to 6%? It actually makes their job more difficult in many ways.
Don't be silly. Acceptance rates are heavily weighted in college rankings. And btw, the acceptance rate isn't 5-6%. It is more like 20-50% for some demographics and 0% for the rest.
Like URMs (especially affluent ones), big donor legacy kids and critical sport recruited athletes.
Anonymous wrote:I interview for Yale. Reality is that almost every student I interview COULD make it at Yale - only once did I meet an applicant and think WTF? So no-hopers are not being encouraged to apply just to up,the numbers. If you want to know why the numbers are so high, most of the posters on this board need to look in the mirror with their "HYP or bust" philosophies. They have turned their kids into decent candidates through coaching and other enrichment, but it means the odds go down.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:A large part of the problem can be attributed to the great desire of international students to study here. If you scan the wait lists (waiting for sCEA results) for Ivies and some of the great state schools and Tech Schools, you see a number of posts coming in from China and India from anxious students waiting to hear. The overseas students apply to the schools they've heard about, just like we naturally would think of Oxbridge. But, yeah, the schools DO want as many applicants as possible so as to drive down that selectivity number below 6%. That's why SAT II tests were no longer requires but "strongly suggested". The Ivies in competition for that no. one slot need as many applicants as possible (so they can turn them down) so decided "requiring" the SAT II was too restrictive so changed the language. But you better submit them or else!
The top schools in those countries are way more competitive vs Yale.
Anonymous wrote:A large part of the problem can be attributed to the great desire of international students to study here. If you scan the wait lists (waiting for sCEA results) for Ivies and some of the great state schools and Tech Schools, you see a number of posts coming in from China and India from anxious students waiting to hear. The overseas students apply to the schools they've heard about, just like we naturally would think of Oxbridge. But, yeah, the schools DO want as many applicants as possible so as to drive down that selectivity number below 6%. That's why SAT II tests were no longer requires but "strongly suggested". The Ivies in competition for that no. one slot need as many applicants as possible (so they can turn them down) so decided "requiring" the SAT II was too restrictive so changed the language. But you better submit them or else!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It's all about enticing students who never have a chance to apply, then claiming a super low admissions rate.
+1. It is a scam
You picked the wrong example to make this point. Do you actually think that Yale believes that its brand is any stronger because acceptance rates drop from 7% to 6%? It actually makes their job more difficult in many ways.
Don't be silly. Acceptance rates are heavily weighted in college rankings. And btw, the acceptance rate isn't 5-6%. It is more like 20-50% for some demographics and 0% for the rest.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It's all about enticing students who never have a chance to apply, then claiming a super low admissions rate.
+1. It is a scam
You picked the wrong example to make this point. Do you actually think that Yale believes that its brand is any stronger because acceptance rates drop from 7% to 6%? It actually makes their job more difficult in many ways.
Don't be silly. Acceptance rates are heavily weighted in college rankings. And btw, the acceptance rate isn't 5-6%. It is more like 20-50% for some demographics and 0% for the rest.