Anonymous wrote:Getting back to the link showing where Bethesda HS students applied and were accepted I found these details really puzzling.
So 60% of all Bethesda area HS students were accepted by UMDCP
But 67% of applicants were accepted to Edinburgh and 63% were accepted by Toronto
Far more prestigious universities, in most people's opinions.
St Mary's also accepted 60% of applicants (and had far fewer than UMDCP with only 230 as opposed to 1971)
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:They apply to the same schools as any other kids from just about any region of the country. And, they get into whatever school that matches their grades/test scores. Not that surprising.
Whoever questioned Indiana, I've met a number of kids who have gone there. Not every kid is going to get into HYP, they have to go somewhere.
Yeah, but why Indiana? It just seems very random.
Indiana is pretty easy to get into for a student from this area with decent stats. If you want big state school and can't get into U MD or U VA, it's a good option.
They also give significant merit aid to students with very high stats.
Their engineering school is quite strong, but not as hard to get into as U MD of Va Tech.
Anonymous wrote:Lots of Jewish kids at Indiana. The ones who can't get into Michigan.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My son list is:
Harvard
Yale
MIT
Stanford
Caltec
Berkeley
CMU
UVA
UMCP
He is also thinking about
Princeton
UPen
Georgetown
Cornell
TA&M
The most important are HYM..
Your son had better have some safeties lined up. Most of the schools on that list (aside from UMCP and Texas A&M) are reaches, even for top students.
Texas A & M may be a reach depending on PP's son's scores due to the Texas 10% law. See College Confidential.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My son list is:
Harvard
Yale
MIT
Stanford
Caltec
Berkeley
CMU
UVA
UMCP
He is also thinking about
Princeton
UPen
Georgetown
Cornell
TA&M
The most important are HYM..
Your son had better have some safeties lined up. Most of the schools on that list (aside from UMCP and Texas A&M) are reaches, even for top students.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Carlton
Kenyon
Oberlin
Earlham
Middlebury
Weslayan
Interesting how Earlham is mentioned in the same sentence as the others now. Definitely a soaring school.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Despite claims on DCUM that everyone graduates with straight As, there are plenty of B+ students who aren't going to get in to most of the listed schools.
Indiana is in a fun college town, has a great business school, and has relatively easy admissions. I can see why well off parents would rather send their kids there instead of Towson.
And has a good Slavic and Eastern European Studies program, although I don't know what that has for undergrads.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:They apply to the same schools as any other kids from just about any region of the country. And, they get into whatever school that matches their grades/test scores. Not that surprising.
Whoever questioned Indiana, I've met a number of kids who have gone there. Not every kid is going to get into HYP, they have to go somewhere.
Yeah, but why Indiana? It just seems very random.
It's a beautiful campus and the weather isn't as cold as Madison or Ann Arbor. And more so than Wisconsin and probably even Michigan, it's very popular with Jewish kids from the Mid-Atlantic whose parents can afford to send them to a more attractive school than, say, UMD or Rutgers, so there's a comfort factor at play than wouldn't exist at every school in the Midwest.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:They apply to the same schools as any other kids from just about any region of the country. And, they get into whatever school that matches their grades/test scores. Not that surprising.
Whoever questioned Indiana, I've met a number of kids who have gone there. Not every kid is going to get into HYP, they have to go somewhere.
Yeah, but why Indiana? It just seems very random.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:They apply to the same schools as any other kids from just about any region of the country. And, they get into whatever school that matches their grades/test scores. Not that surprising.
Whoever questioned Indiana, I've met a number of kids who have gone there. Not every kid is going to get into HYP, they have to go somewhere.
duh. of course they don't go to hyp. that's why I didn't question Montgomery, Towson, Salisbury... I just wondered why they prefered Indiana to Ohio State or Kansas State or ...
Well, 173 applied to Ohio State (vs. 253 at IU) so it’s not that big of a difference. And Kansas State doesn’t really have any of the draw that IU does like Big 10 sports or top 100 USNWR or a renowned college town or a top 10 business school.
Maybe top 10 in the state of Indiana but nowhere near a top 10 nationwide.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:They apply to the same schools as any other kids from just about any region of the country. And, they get into whatever school that matches their grades/test scores. Not that surprising.
Whoever questioned Indiana, I've met a number of kids who have gone there. Not every kid is going to get into HYP, they have to go somewhere.
duh. of course they don't go to hyp. that's why I didn't question Montgomery, Towson, Salisbury... I just wondered why they prefered Indiana to Ohio State or Kansas State or ...
Well, 173 applied to Ohio State (vs. 253 at IU) so it’s not that big of a difference. And Kansas State doesn’t really have any of the draw that IU does like Big 10 sports or top 100 USNWR or a renowned college town or a top 10 business school.