Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:UC Merced up to #58. Will be top 50 by next year.
93% acceptance rate, 9% yield!!!
Get in while you can!
It's time to rank privates and publics separately.
They do have a separate ranking for publics:
https://www.usnews.com/best-colleges/rankings/national-universities/top-public
Private only
1 Princeton
2 MIT
3 Havard
4 Standford
5 Yale
6 Caltech,Duke,JHU,Northwestern
7 Upenn
8 Cornell,Uchicago
9 Brown,Columbia,
10 Dartmouth
11 Rice,NortreDame, Vanderbilt
12 CMU,WashU
13 Emory, GEORGETOWN
14 USC
15 NYU
16 Boston College,Tufts
17 Boston University
18 University of Rochester
19 Lehigh,WakeForest
20 Case Western
Anonymous wrote:The rankings are out now.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Another year with ND in the top 20. Another year the haters will say it won't last. Always get a chuckle out of this.
Notre Dame is 3.59% black. Shameful
it's not 3.59% Black
4% says CollegeVine. https://www.collegevine.com/schools/university-of-notre-dame
According to ND CDS, it's 6% for first year enrolled students. 4.6% for total enrollment. So the trend is improving.
Well, that's one possibility. Another way of getting to those numbers is if Black students transfer out disproportionately.
Anonymous wrote:https://publiccounsel.org/our-cases/smith-v-regents-of-university-of-california/
Eliminating University of California’s Use of Discriminatory SAT and ACT Scores
For decades, the University of California’s use of discriminatory SAT and ACT scores deprived hundreds of thousands of well-qualified students of color, students from low-income families, and students with disabilities of the opportunity to pursue higher education in the nation’s preeminent public university system.
Anonymous wrote:1. Princeton
2. MIT
3. Harvard
4. Stanford
5. Yale
6. Caltech, Duke, JHU, Northwestern
10. UPenn
11. Cornell, UChicago
13. Brown, Columbia
15. Dartmouth, UCLA
17. Berkeley
18. Rice, Notre Dame, Vanderbilt
21. CMU, UMich, WashU
24. Emory, Georgetown, UVA
27. UNC, USC
29. UCSD
30. NYU UF UT Austin
33. Georgia Tech, UC Davis, UC Irvine, UIUC
37. BC, Tufts
39. UCSB, UW Madison
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Another year with ND in the top 20. Another year the haters will say it won't last. Always get a chuckle out of this.
Notre Dame is 3.59% black. Shameful
it's not 3.59% Black
4% says CollegeVine. https://www.collegevine.com/schools/university-of-notre-dame
According to ND CDS, it's 6% for first year enrolled students. 4.6% for total enrollment. So the trend is improving.
Anonymous wrote:William and Mary behing Virginia Tech.
This is what high school counselors have been saying for years.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Another year with ND in the top 20. Another year the haters will say it won't last. Always get a chuckle out of this.
Notre Dame is 3.59% black. Shameful
it's not 3.59% Black
4% says CollegeVine. https://www.collegevine.com/schools/university-of-notre-dame
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Another year with ND in the top 20. Another year the haters will say it won't last. Always get a chuckle out of this.
Notre Dame is 3.59% black. Shameful
A Catholic school in Indiana isn’t a huge draw for POC? Shocking!!
ahem. Using the same argument, there should be only 18% Catholics at ND because Indiana is only 18% Catholic.
No, when doing this analysis the experts compare to the national percentage of blacks, which is 14%. Hence, Harvard's black population is 14%. So it is at the other top schools. How do they achieve this? By offering generous merit and financial aid packages. Clearly, ND isn't vested in increasing diversity for the sake of its own student body by trying to increase the number if black students, Catholic or not.
4% of US Catholics are black. This lines up with the percent of blacks at Notre Dame. Notre Dame is a religious school and has different institutional priorities than secular universities.
Agree. ND is well known for its religious priorities and the students it attracts. Why anyone would expect different percentages of ND is ludicrous. Move on folks.
+100
I am the one who posted that haters complain each year saying ND doesn't belong in T20. The fact of the matter is that ND will continue to focus it's priorities on its Catholic identity. This means there will be less appeal to the general non-Catholic public and limits its ability to attract people of more diversity. Despite ND's dedication to its strong Catholic identity, it manages to say on top of the rankings, likely because it makes up for this limitation with other very strong characteristics, like it's great academics, beautiful campus, strong athletics, and welcoming community. People here saying that other Catholic institutions manage to have more diversity, keep in mind that those schools are not as blatant about its religious affiliation. Specifically, ND has chapels in all of it's residence halls, a very active basilica on campus, Touchdown Jesus, the grotto, and many of the main student events have an element of religion sprinkled in. This might make some students uncomfortable -- hence the attraction is just not there. Still, it remains a T20 and that is what irks most people here on DCUM.
No, we just find the diversity numbers to be disturbing. ND could do something about that if it chose to. It chooses not to divert funds to recruiting black students.
Or if it wants to focus on Catholic students why doesn't it have more Latino students. It is weird to me that a school that emphasizes it's Catholic identity so much would have so few Latino students. Like ignore diversity for a second -- ND doesn't do a good job of merely representing the *Catholic* community. It's weird.
Catholic Latina mom here. My high stats (fcps grad) kid did not even apply to ND. Our main reason was tuition. We probably would not have qualified for much aid either.
Second reason, although my kids went to k-8 parrochial school, many Latin American Catholics are not super conservative in the religious sense. Most are culturally Catholic, so ND being very focused on their religious identity, was not a draw for my DD.
Third reason: Distance. Most college students in Latin America live at home and commute. Living on campus is not the norm still for US Hispanics. So when comparing percentages of Hispanic students in the US to those enrolled in universities, our numbers will always be lower at “isolated” campuses. In all fairness, my DD lives on campus at an in-state school.
Fourth: North Bend is freaking cold for “my people”. I mean, the word “North” is in the name of the town! Many kids are trying to attend schools in warmer regions anyway.
Thanks for the insight. Seems spot on. But it’s “South Bend.” Not that it makes it any warmer.
Oops! Thanks for the correction.
Also forgot to add…current low Hispanic numbers at ND will continue to make the school less attractive to future applicants. That good old self fulfilling prophecy.
I have never visited the campus, but from what I see in the football stands, the crowd does look very Caucasian, but let’s not forget, many Hispanics do look Caucasian. I’m thinking the few Hispanics that do apply, probably fit the Caucasian look. Those are the ones that are more likely able to afford the tuition. This due to the history of racism and colonialism in Latin America.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Another year with ND in the top 20. Another year the haters will say it won't last. Always get a chuckle out of this.
Notre Dame is 3.59% black. Shameful
it's not 3.59% Black
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:William and Mary behing Virginia Tech.
This is what high school counselors have been saying for years.
No they haven't.
Not shocking VT is ranked higher when they play affirmative action with first gens
+1. Also, VT practices yield protection.
This has been repeatedly debunked on DCUM. From VT’s own website:
“Virginia Tech does not participate in yield protection.”
https://www.vt.edu/admissions/undergraduate/counselor-corner.html
Yes, yes they do. Just because they don't say it does not mean they don't. I have watched too many top 5 stellar students including my own that went on to top 10 schools, get waitlisted, not complaining about it, I think it's smart business but it's no coincidence.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Precovid, 40% of Berkeley's undergrads had below a 1290 on the SAT or 29 on the ACT.
This just proves that SAT's are meaningless.
Or maybe it proves that SATs are meaningful. Thus the reason all the most selective colleges are reinstating test required.
The state of California says that SAT's are racist in design and implementation. That's why California has done away with them.