Anonymous wrote:I think out of state people think the state contracted colleges at Cornell are cheap. They're not. We do have reasonably priced in-state options with SUNY, but not Cornell.
COA in-state is 66k for the NY State contract colleges and 88k for the others .
Bing, otoh, is about 25k.
I think the "oh, the cheap Cornell" story is overplayed.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Is that one of the schools that is not considered part of the “Ivy League” portion of the school?
The whole school is Ivy.
Really? I have a lot of friends from New York and grew up near there. Everyone I knew growing up considered only the undergrad arts and sciences to be Ivy.
Umm. Think about it.
There are athletes in every single Cornell college who compete against the other Ivies for every sport. How would that happen - If only one college at Cornell was considered in the Ivy League?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Is that one of the schools that is not considered part of the “Ivy League” portion of the school?
The whole school is Ivy.
Really? I have a lot of friends from New York and grew up near there. Everyone I knew growing up considered only the undergrad arts and sciences to be Ivy.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Is that one of the schools that is not considered part of the “Ivy League” portion of the school?
The whole school is Ivy.
Really? I have a lot of friends from New York and grew up near there. Everyone I knew growing up considered only the undergrad arts and sciences to be Ivy.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Is that one of the schools that is not considered part of the “Ivy League” portion of the school?
The whole school is Ivy.
Really? I have a lot of friends from New York and grew up near there. Everyone I knew growing up considered only the undergrad arts and sciences to be Ivy.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Is that one of the schools that is not considered part of the “Ivy League” portion of the school?
The whole school is Ivy.
Really? I have a lot of friends from New York and grew up near there. Everyone I knew growing up considered only the undergrad arts and sciences to be Ivy.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Is that one of the schools that is not considered part of the “Ivy League” portion of the school?
The whole school is Ivy.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Hi, I went to Cornell. I applied to A&S OOS because I was undecided, and you had to apply to major at schools like CALS and Hum Ecology.
In my experience, the in-state students often tried to shoehorn themselves into a major that was offered at the state school, to save $. So for example at the time, a lot of students who wanted to be in business took "Agricultural Economics"--now called Applied Economics and Management in CALS (The Ag School) whereas OOS might take Economics in A&S or even Hotel Management at the Hotel School. Many in-state kids who wanted to be lawyers were in the Industrial & Labor Relations school, whereas the OOS kids wanting to be lawyers might major in Government or similar at A&S. So the majors may seem "niche" but unless you're doing Apparel Design or something, they really don't have to be. I have friends from the Human Ecology school who became doctors (studied Human Development or "Biology & Society") lawyers, marketing professionals, etc. I have friends from CALS who went into finance, or became doctors, or became lawyers.
If your DC is unsure what they want to study, I would consider whether there are majors in the "easier to get into" schools (i.e., not A&S or Engineering) that are broad enough. There probably are.
That said, I do think even these schools will be more difficult for OOS than in-state. The reason is the yield. If you look at that link PP posted, a school like Industrial & Labor relations has a higher acceptance rate (almost 20%) but over 80% of students then matriculate. That's probably because virtually all the in-state kids who were accepted said "Yes of course I'll go to an Ivy for $46K a year instead of $68K" meaning they were probably prioritized for admission, probably more ED'd, and there are fewer spots for OOS who are less likely to commit if admitted.
For on campus recruiting at Cornell, does it matter what your major is? For example, if you are majoring in Hotel Management but you change your mind later on and want to go into finance or consulting, will you be competitive with the business majors if you have taken the finance and business courses as electives?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Hi, I went to Cornell. I applied to A&S OOS because I was undecided, and you had to apply to major at schools like CALS and Hum Ecology.
In my experience, the in-state students often tried to shoehorn themselves into a major that was offered at the state school, to save $. So for example at the time, a lot of students who wanted to be in business took "Agricultural Economics"--now called Applied Economics and Management in CALS (The Ag School) whereas OOS might take Economics in A&S or even Hotel Management at the Hotel School. Many in-state kids who wanted to be lawyers were in the Industrial & Labor Relations school, whereas the OOS kids wanting to be lawyers might major in Government or similar at A&S. So the majors may seem "niche" but unless you're doing Apparel Design or something, they really don't have to be. I have friends from the Human Ecology school who became doctors (studied Human Development or "Biology & Society") lawyers, marketing professionals, etc. I have friends from CALS who went into finance, or became doctors, or became lawyers.
If your DC is unsure what they want to study, I would consider whether there are majors in the "easier to get into" schools (i.e., not A&S or Engineering) that are broad enough. There probably are.
That said, I do think even these schools will be more difficult for OOS than in-state. The reason is the yield. If you look at that link PP posted, a school like Industrial & Labor relations has a higher acceptance rate (almost 20%) but over 80% of students then matriculate. That's probably because virtually all the in-state kids who were accepted said "Yes of course I'll go to an Ivy for $46K a year instead of $68K" meaning they were probably prioritized for admission, probably more ED'd, and there are fewer spots for OOS who are less likely to commit if admitted.
For on campus recruiting at Cornell, does it matter what your major is? For example, if you are majoring in Hotel Management but you change your mind later on and want to go into finance or consulting, will you be competitive with the business majors if you have taken the finance and business courses as electives?
I'm not sure, but I will tell you I know people who are managing directors at trading firms or doing wealth management who graduated from the Hotel School. You can do a specialization in "Hospitality Finance". Also the Hotel School is supposed to be incredible for networking. Hotelies love other Hotelies.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Hi, I went to Cornell. I applied to A&S OOS because I was undecided, and you had to apply to major at schools like CALS and Hum Ecology.
In my experience, the in-state students often tried to shoehorn themselves into a major that was offered at the state school, to save $. So for example at the time, a lot of students who wanted to be in business took "Agricultural Economics"--now called Applied Economics and Management in CALS (The Ag School) whereas OOS might take Economics in A&S or even Hotel Management at the Hotel School. Many in-state kids who wanted to be lawyers were in the Industrial & Labor Relations school, whereas the OOS kids wanting to be lawyers might major in Government or similar at A&S. So the majors may seem "niche" but unless you're doing Apparel Design or something, they really don't have to be. I have friends from the Human Ecology school who became doctors (studied Human Development or "Biology & Society") lawyers, marketing professionals, etc. I have friends from CALS who went into finance, or became doctors, or became lawyers.
If your DC is unsure what they want to study, I would consider whether there are majors in the "easier to get into" schools (i.e., not A&S or Engineering) that are broad enough. There probably are.
That said, I do think even these schools will be more difficult for OOS than in-state. The reason is the yield. If you look at that link PP posted, a school like Industrial & Labor relations has a higher acceptance rate (almost 20%) but over 80% of students then matriculate. That's probably because virtually all the in-state kids who were accepted said "Yes of course I'll go to an Ivy for $46K a year instead of $68K" meaning they were probably prioritized for admission, probably more ED'd, and there are fewer spots for OOS who are less likely to commit if admitted.
For on campus recruiting at Cornell, does it matter what your major is? For example, if you are majoring in Hotel Management but you change your mind later on and want to go into finance or consulting, will you be competitive with the business majors if you have taken the finance and business courses as electives?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Hi, I went to Cornell. I applied to A&S OOS because I was undecided, and you had to apply to major at schools like CALS and Hum Ecology.
In my experience, the in-state students often tried to shoehorn themselves into a major that was offered at the state school, to save $. So for example at the time, a lot of students who wanted to be in business took "Agricultural Economics"--now called Applied Economics and Management in CALS (The Ag School) whereas OOS might take Economics in A&S or even Hotel Management at the Hotel School. Many in-state kids who wanted to be lawyers were in the Industrial & Labor Relations school, whereas the OOS kids wanting to be lawyers might major in Government or similar at A&S. So the majors may seem "niche" but unless you're doing Apparel Design or something, they really don't have to be. I have friends from the Human Ecology school who became doctors (studied Human Development or "Biology & Society") lawyers, marketing professionals, etc. I have friends from CALS who went into finance, or became doctors, or became lawyers.
If your DC is unsure what they want to study, I would consider whether there are majors in the "easier to get into" schools (i.e., not A&S or Engineering) that are broad enough. There probably are.
That said, I do think even these schools will be more difficult for OOS than in-state. The reason is the yield. If you look at that link PP posted, a school like Industrial & Labor relations has a higher acceptance rate (almost 20%) but over 80% of students then matriculate. That's probably because virtually all the in-state kids who were accepted said "Yes of course I'll go to an Ivy for $46K a year instead of $68K" meaning they were probably prioritized for admission, probably more ED'd, and there are fewer spots for OOS who are less likely to commit if admitted.
For on campus recruiting at Cornell, does it matter what your major is? For example, if you are majoring in Hotel Management but you change your mind later on and want to go into finance or consulting, will you be competitive with the business majors if you have taken the finance and business courses as electives?
Anonymous wrote:Hi, I went to Cornell. I applied to A&S OOS because I was undecided, and you had to apply to major at schools like CALS and Hum Ecology.
In my experience, the in-state students often tried to shoehorn themselves into a major that was offered at the state school, to save $. So for example at the time, a lot of students who wanted to be in business took "Agricultural Economics"--now called Applied Economics and Management in CALS (The Ag School) whereas OOS might take Economics in A&S or even Hotel Management at the Hotel School. Many in-state kids who wanted to be lawyers were in the Industrial & Labor Relations school, whereas the OOS kids wanting to be lawyers might major in Government or similar at A&S. So the majors may seem "niche" but unless you're doing Apparel Design or something, they really don't have to be. I have friends from the Human Ecology school who became doctors (studied Human Development or "Biology & Society") lawyers, marketing professionals, etc. I have friends from CALS who went into finance, or became doctors, or became lawyers.
If your DC is unsure what they want to study, I would consider whether there are majors in the "easier to get into" schools (i.e., not A&S or Engineering) that are broad enough. There probably are.
That said, I do think even these schools will be more difficult for OOS than in-state. The reason is the yield. If you look at that link PP posted, a school like Industrial & Labor relations has a higher acceptance rate (almost 20%) but over 80% of students then matriculate. That's probably because virtually all the in-state kids who were accepted said "Yes of course I'll go to an Ivy for $46K a year instead of $68K" meaning they were probably prioritized for admission, probably more ED'd, and there are fewer spots for OOS who are less likely to commit if admitted.