Anonymous wrote:BU feels like Pitt. BC feels like University of Richmond with Jesuits.
Anonymous wrote:Also BU used to be notorious for both grade deflation AND tying scholarships to continued high performance. I had friends who were really sweating it. Not sure if this is still the case.
Anonymous wrote:Also BU used to be notorious for both grade deflation AND tying scholarships to continued high performance. I had friends who were really sweating it. Not sure if this is still the case.
Anonymous wrote:I've always thought of BU as like a little NYU. Compared with BC, it's more urban, more artsy, more Jewish, probably a little more diverse racially, less sporty, less preppy, less cohesive. Academically they're probably about the same level, but where you get very smart BU students, they're likely to be a more intellectual. BC is very pre-professional. BU, being huge, has many strata, layers, pockets of this or that. I had friends there who were liberal arts majors, but they lived VERY different lives from the kids at the hotel school. BC is more even throughout.
Anonymous wrote:BC and BU have such different styles that I wonder if many students even apply to both at the same time.
My daughter only applied to BU but due to the uncertainty of financial aid, she applied RD. She was one of the top in her class and completed the IBDP. She is attending BU since she received great financial aid.
We have a very positive impression of the school so far. Unlike when we first applied, this experience has made us reconsider not only the academic excellence of schools but also how important the regional characteristics are.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Boston College is better academically and ranked slightly higher (if you care about rankings). It’s harder to get into and has a better reputation overall. BC has more of a traditional campus - beautiful architecture and grounds. BU is an urban campus. BC also has better athletics with football, basketball, hockey, and lacrosse drawing good crowds and school spirit. BU really only has hockey. Know many people who did not get into BC and ended up at BU.
Acceptance rates
2024
BU-10.7
BC-14.7
2023
BU-10.9
BC-15.5
2022
BU-14.0
BC-16.7
https://www.ivywise.com/blog/college-admission-rates/
https://admissions.blog/boston-universitys-acceptance-rate-drops-to-10-7/#:~:text=BU's%20overall%20acceptance%20rate%20during,accepted%20roughly%2014%25%20of%20them.
BU is the slightly easier admit, punts some students to spring (following in NEU's footsteps a smitch) and even after that still having test scores just a tad under BC's, and has less of a self-selecting applicant pool. That said, they are fairly close for admission, and it's possible to get into one but not the other.
Northeastern doesn't have Spring admit.
N.U.in: is a Spring admit program.
No it's not. You start in the Fall.
The NU.in students are not on campus in Boston until spring, thus their academic stats are not included:
Aoun also began using spring enrollment to his advantage. In 2007 the school introduced N.U.in, a program that invites students with lower grades and SAT scores to spend their first semester abroad and begin their on-campus experience in the spring. U.S. News does not collect data for spring entrants, so those students’ lower grades and scores are excluded from the rankings. Editor Brian Kelly explains that U.S. News doesn’t require spring data because the federal government doesn’t either, but he concedes, “It’s possible that is a gaming window.”
https://www.bostonmagazine.com/news/2014/08/26/how-northeastern-gamed-the-college-rankings/