So your theory is that schools are admitting more (weaker) boys so that they'll be able to continue attracting (weaker) boys? OkaaaaayAnonymous wrote:Said literally no woman ever. We’re keeping the male population up at these schools because parents are obsessive about their boys having boy friends: read the 100s of posts here about their DS “fitting in” at any college that isn’t 50% male.Anonymous wrote:Larla: It's not fair that I need better grades and ECs than boys to be admitted to the same schools.
Also Larla: I refuse to attend any school that's not at least 45% male.
Sorry, Larla.
Anonymous wrote:I wonder if it varies by high school.
Our high school admitted 20 women and 5 men to Michigan (in-state).
I was freaked out by this until I realized this was similar to the gender breakdowns of the summa cum laudes and NHS. So women are overperforming at our high school, and they just take the top of the class. Other schools might have a different split.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I actually don't see it with kids for the top schools because they are all 50/50. Even MIT is 50/50.
I see it more at the tiers of 20+...places like Tulane that are 63% female and even many of the flagships that tend to have far more females applying and attending.
They are 50/50 because they accept more male applicants, there are less of them.
Here are some samples from the most recent CDS:
Princeton: 20,100 F applying / 19,500 M applying
Brown: 31,650 F applying / 19,666 m applying
Cornell: 34,172 F / 33,674 M
Dartmouth: 15,325 F / 13,516 M
Harvard: 30,363 F / 26,301 M
MIT: 8,939 F / 16,568 M
Stanford: 26,600 F / 27,133 M
Penn: 32,137 F / 27,128 M
So, seems like a definite advantage for men at Brown and definite advantage at MIT for women. Slight advantage for men at Harvard and Penn
This assumes that the average male and female applicant is approximately equal in qualifications. If female applicants are stronger on average (as evidence suggests they are), the shares by gender don't fully reflect the disparity.
Anonymous wrote:Larla: It's not fair that I need better grades and ECs than boys to be admitted to the same schools.
Also Larla: I refuse to attend any school that's not at least 45% male.
Sorry, Larla.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:% Scoring 1400-1600:
Male: 8%
Female: 5%
% Scoring 700+ in Math:
Male: 11%
Female: 6%
% Scoring 700+ in Reading:
Male: 7%
Female: 7%
Test optional would seem to hurt boys then.
Anonymous wrote:% Scoring 1400-1600:
Male: 8%
Female: 5%
% Scoring 700+ in Math:
Male: 11%
Female: 6%
% Scoring 700+ in Reading:
Male: 7%
Female: 7%
Anonymous wrote:I’m hearing the same thing at co-ed HSs near me, which is a bit wild because we also saw it with HS admissions coming out of our private, co-Ed k-8. DD is at a girls’ school so at least we don’t have to experience it personally this time.
Anonymous wrote:Is our high school the only one with a huge disparity in gender among acceptances so far this fall? More than 15 unhooked boys into Top 20s and only three girls. Just wondering if it’s a trend this year, every year, or just a coincidence that our girls aren’t doing as well (and yes, I have a daughter but she didn’t apply early so it’s not a personal gripe - just a female one!)
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Why is this a surprise? Schools would like a gender balance, there are more qualified applicants than seats and top schools can afford to have a slightly easier acceptance rate for males and still get top students.
There are more women applying to almost every top program.
I am a mother of daughters and my oldest is at a school that is 60% female. I think a gender balance is important for college if at all possible.
I’m the OP and I guess it’s just a surprise to me because it’s my first time with a senior. I think it’s also harder to see one student succeed over another objectively less qualified applicant when you know the kids personally. You really do learn something new everyday in this process.
If you have high school daughters the school climate has really changed since you were in high school. My boys go to a high school that is essentially 50/50 male/female. However, in their AP and Honors classes, they are a noticiable minority. However, the very top students in both grades are boys. By a noticeable margin it is the boys who are recognized for the highest GPAs, NMSF, academic awards. So don't assume that those boys are getting an unfair advantabe.
Anonymous wrote:Before the ban on consideration of race is admissions, the hardest admit to competitive programs was Asian women, next was white women. Now it is probably just women.
The Wesleyan admit rate is quite skewed.
As a parent of academically competitive young women that thinks the social aspect of college is equally important to the academic aspect, I do not have a problem with this even though my children are disadvantaged because there is more to college than just academics.
Please do not sue, college is hard enough for young people.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I actually don't see it with kids for the top schools because they are all 50/50. Even MIT is 50/50.
I see it more at the tiers of 20+...places like Tulane that are 63% female and even many of the flagships that tend to have far more females applying and attending.
They are 50/50 because they accept more male applicants, there are less of them.
Here are some samples from the most recent CDS:
Princeton: 20,100 F applying / 19,500 M applying
Brown: 31,650 F applying / 19,666 m applying
Cornell: 34,172 F / 33,674 M
Dartmouth: 15,325 F / 13,516 M
Harvard: 30,363 F / 26,301 M
MIT: 8,939 F / 16,568 M
Stanford: 26,600 F / 27,133 M
Penn: 32,137 F / 27,128 M
So, seems like a definite advantage for men at Brown and definite advantage at MIT for women. Slight advantage for men at Harvard and Penn
This assumes that the average male and female applicant is approximately equal in qualifications. If female applicants are stronger on average (as evidence suggests they are), the shares by gender don't fully reflect the disparity.
The admitted classes are definitely not 50% female and 50% male for many of these schools. Most of the classes have a higher percentage of females. I don't know if that's true for MIT or for every school on this list, but in general college classes contain a higher percentage of females these days.
So in general, fewer males apply and fewer males are admitted.