Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I suppose ED acceptance rate also vary by school - I know ED acceptance to Cornell last year was close to 50% for one school, other schools probably not as high or could be higher.
According to the most recent CDS for Cornell, 9017 students applied ED and 1930 were accepted (for a 21% acceptance rate). Remember, that includes athletes, legacies, etc. Given this overall rate, it's hard to imagine how any of the schools (or multiple schools) could have an acceptance rate of 50% or higher.
That is so confusing, where is the 50% admission rate posted?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Ok I looked up stats by school for class of 2026. Human Ecology was 15.7 percent. 4.17 percent the same year for Dyson, the business school. Arts and Sciences is 5.14 percent. 18.26 for labor. This is overall but you can imagine ED is higher. You see the NY schools are higher. ED a NY school. Overall university was 7.24 percent but they admit by college.
Can you take classes at the other schools?
Anonymous wrote:Which college? What major?
Anonymous wrote:Ok I looked up stats by school for class of 2026. Human Ecology was 15.7 percent. 4.17 percent the same year for Dyson, the business school. Arts and Sciences is 5.14 percent. 18.26 for labor. This is overall but you can imagine ED is higher. You see the NY schools are higher. ED a NY school. Overall university was 7.24 percent but they admit by college.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:On this page, https://irp.dpb.cornell.edu/university-factbook/undergraduate-admissions, you can see the admissions data by school if you sort the graph, but you cannot see the difference between ED and RD by school, just overall.
What graph? Can you link to the specific page? That link goes to a list of many links.
Here is the link again, but I think it will take you to that same general page. If so, just click on "Facts and Dashboards," and then Undergraduate Admissions, and then you will get to the graphs I was thinking of.
https://irp.dpb.cornell.edu/university-factbook/undergraduate-admissions
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:On this page, https://irp.dpb.cornell.edu/university-factbook/undergraduate-admissions, you can see the admissions data by school if you sort the graph, but you cannot see the difference between ED and RD by school, just overall.
What graph? Can you link to the specific page? That link goes to a list of many links.
Anonymous wrote:On this page, https://irp.dpb.cornell.edu/university-factbook/undergraduate-admissions, you can see the admissions data by school if you sort the graph, but you cannot see the difference between ED and RD by school, just overall.
Anonymous wrote:The acceptance rates are actually published somewhere online, would be worth it to look, but off the top of my head, yes, the cornell ed acceptance rate is higher than the rd rate, and both vary substantially by school within cornell.
cornell's organisational structure more resembles a state flagship than some of its ivy peers—that's not a dig at all or comment on the academic quality, but you have lots of different colleges, an agriculture school, etc. 3 of the schools are funded by the State of NY and NY students can get in-state tuition, the other cornell colleges are not.
Of them (hardest to easiest admit):
Hardest:
Dyson school of applied economics and management: hardest to get into, low single digits acceptance rate. This is located within college of agriculture and life sciences (CALS), which is NY state funded
Still hard, in no particular order:
College of Engineering
How about the vet school fool
College of Arts and Sciences
College of Architecture, Art and Planning
College of Agriculture and Life Sciences (NY State funded)
Easier (to my knowledge and memory):
School of Hotel Administration
College of Human Ecology (state-funded): this includes the Jeb E Brooks school of public policy
*note, these differences in difficulty of admission are nominal, but the admit rates for the easier category might sit in the teens
But seriously, you have to do research on cornell, figure out what you want when you're applying and craft a narrative in your application to support that. Be strategic. It's not a Brown/LAC "major in anything you want" atmosphere.