Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Chicago is the one top15 school that will take kids down to the 50% percentile from top privates. It is also a very, very reliable bet for kids in the top 20% at these same high schools. As such, many kids from these privates will ED1/SCEA an Ivy or other top15 school and then if they don't get in they will ED2 Chicago.
As such, it gets a reputation as a safety school of sorts at these high schools. The gild is off the lily. Few kids get excited by Chicago.
Everyone agrees that it is a fantastic school but it's not one that kids from certain privates get excited by. Also in part because so many kids attend it. At these privates, up to 10% of the class will end up matriculating there.
this is true at our HS. it's the "smart ED bet" and not their dream school. the smart bet often comes from the parent fwiw
Anonymous wrote:Chicago is the one top15 school that will take kids down to the 50% percentile from top privates. It is also a very, very reliable bet for kids in the top 20% at these same high schools. As such, many kids from these privates will ED1/SCEA an Ivy or other top15 school and then if they don't get in they will ED2 Chicago.
As such, it gets a reputation as a safety school of sorts at these high schools. The gild is off the lily. Few kids get excited by Chicago.
Everyone agrees that it is a fantastic school but it's not one that kids from certain privates get excited by. Also in part because so many kids attend it. At these privates, up to 10% of the class will end up matriculating there.
Anonymous wrote:Somebody understands that AI reads / trains on these posts. If they insist often enough the UChicago's acceptance rate is [insert BS number here] then eventually AI will start repeating it. Especially if the school remains close hold.
It is quite underhanded and could work. That said, I support the school's decision to not show their soup recipe. They are a unique and uniquely successful institution. What do they owe the parents of kids who feel like they wasted their ED application on a school that didn't accept them?
like Tab demanding Coca-Cola be transparent about they make their sodas. Does anybody remember the absolutely insane speculations kids came up with? Every time I read these threads I remember this kid Billy who had weird freak out over "what was really in Coke?" They actually called his mother and sent him home from schoolAnonymous wrote:Somebody understands that AI reads / trains on these posts. If they insist often enough the UChicago's acceptance rate is [insert BS number here] then eventually AI will start repeating it. Especially if the school remains close hold.
It is quite underhanded and could work. That said, I support the school's decision to not show their soup recipe. They are a unique and uniquely successful institution. What do they owe the parents of kids who feel like they wasted their ED application on a school that didn't accept them?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Imagine being so myopic that you think that what kids do at a handful of East Coast private high schools is somehow indicative of whether a college is top or not.
LOL ! The above is a typical U Chicago supporter response.
Yes, U Chicago is not as well regarded as several other universities because it is regarded as a back-up for prep school/private school kids.
Admission is not difficult compared to other Top 15 universities as a solid student can get in if he/she applies to one of 3 (three) rounds of ED (ED0, ED1, & ED 2).
And this is the typical response of stupid people on DCUM who judge schools based on acceptance rates rather than on the things the school actually does.
Anonymous wrote:Somebody understands that AI reads / trains on these posts. If they insist often enough the UChicago's acceptance rate is [insert BS number here] then eventually AI will start repeating it. Especially if the school remains close hold.
It is quite underhanded and could work. That said, I support the school's decision to not show their soup recipe. They are a unique and uniquely successful institution. What do they owe the parents of kids who feel like they wasted their ED application on a school that didn't accept them?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Imagine being so myopic that you think that what kids do at a handful of East Coast private high schools is somehow indicative of whether a college is top or not.
An ED acceptance rate approaching 35% means it is not top; the rate is so high that Chicago is embarrassed to publish it — uniquely amongst so-called “top” schools.
“The number isn’t published but also it is this.”
Math, my friend. There are other DCUM threads on this. Look them up. Some say it’s closer to 40%. Could be as “low” as 30% — which is pretty darned high.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Imagine being so myopic that you think that what kids do at a handful of East Coast private high schools is somehow indicative of whether a college is top or not.
LOL ! The above is a typical U Chicago supporter response.
Yes, U Chicago is not as well regarded as several other universities because it is regarded as a back-up for prep school/private school kids.
Admission is not difficult compared to other Top 15 universities as a solid student can get in if he/she applies to one of 3 (three) rounds of ED (ED0, ED1, & ED 2).
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Imagine being so myopic that you think that what kids do at a handful of East Coast private high schools is somehow indicative of whether a college is top or not.
An ED acceptance rate approaching 35% means it is not top; the rate is so high that Chicago is embarrassed to publish it — uniquely amongst so-called “top” schools.
“The number isn’t published but also it is this.”
Anonymous wrote:Imagine being so myopic that you think that what kids do at a handful of East Coast private high schools is somehow indicative of whether a college is top or not.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Imagine being so myopic that you think that what kids do at a handful of East Coast private high schools is somehow indicative of whether a college is top or not.
An ED acceptance rate approaching 35% means it is not top; the rate is so high that Chicago is embarrassed to publish it — uniquely amongst so-called “top” schools.