Anonymous wrote:Demonstrated interest is huge if you are applying to U of M. That is why I've already signed up DC2 for a tour over Thanksgiving break.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:South Carolina looks pretty popular. Merit money?
Yes, big time. They've joined Univ. of Alabama and maybe a few other southern schools in going hard after bright northeastern kids.
Anonymous wrote:I knew Michigan had gotten competitive but had no idea it was so tough to get in from MoCo. Looks like 1 out of every 6.3 applicants from the listed high schools got in. It's DC's top choice but odds are not looking good. DC likes Wisconsin/Madison also and those odds seem much better.
Tips from anyone on what Michigan looks for in a student (besides good grades and scores of course)?
Anonymous wrote:What is the fascination with Indiana University? Ton of kids from MD applying with great success (81% acceptance rate).
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:UVA is on the same level as Georgetown, Wash U, and Cornell in Maryland. Pretty prestigious.
No, it takes higher GPAs and test scores to now get into UVA. The average incoming high school GPA at Georgetown is a 4.03; at Wash .Univ, a 4.11; at Cornell, a 4.04. The median (half higher, half lower) of the top 25% of UVA's entering class of 2017 was a 4.44, median was a 4.29 and bottom 25% at 4.14. Average ACT 33-35.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This is interesting. I combined the 2 lists and focused in on some of the usual suspects.
Liberal Arts Colleges: Accepts/applicants
Amherst: 12 of 67
Williams: 11 of 64
Pomona 3 of 63
Swarthmore: 11 of 97
Davidson: 11 of 43
Middlebury: 12 of 58
Wow, look at that crazy Pomona acceptance rate. Surprised to see Swarthmore with 50% more applications than just about any of its peers. Maybe kids don't want to be at a small school way out in the country, but they're willing to consider one closer to a city? Not surprised by the low application totals though - it's definitely a self-selecting group that wants a small school.
Universities: Admit/Applied
Brown: 29 of 295
Columbia: 19 of 268
Cornell: 68 of 463
Dartmouth: 13 of 163
Harvard: 16 of 277
Princeton: 21 of 307
Penn: 36 of 441
Stanford: 16 of 296
U of Chicago: 23 of 221
Yale: 30 of 296
High app totals for Penn. Maybe it's the popularity of Wharton among young men? And look at Cornell - maybe people take a shot at an Ivy acceptance by throwing in an application there? With such similar application totals, it's a little hard to escape the feeling that the same bunch of kids were applying to Brown, Columbia, Harvard, Princeton, Stanford and Yale.
The bigger the school, the more apps you're going to see. Penn and Cornell are the two biggest Ivies and received similar numbers of applications. And yes, I'm sure there's a huge overlap of applicants.
Anonymous wrote:This is interesting. I combined the 2 lists and focused in on some of the usual suspects.
Liberal Arts Colleges: Accepts/applicants
Amherst: 12 of 67
Williams: 11 of 64
Pomona 3 of 63
Swarthmore: 11 of 97
Davidson: 11 of 43
Middlebury: 12 of 58
Wow, look at that crazy Pomona acceptance rate. Surprised to see Swarthmore with 50% more applications than just about any of its peers. Maybe kids don't want to be at a small school way out in the country, but they're willing to consider one closer to a city? Not surprised by the low application totals though - it's definitely a self-selecting group that wants a small school.
Universities: Admit/Applied
Brown: 29 of 295
Columbia: 19 of 268
Cornell: 68 of 463
Dartmouth: 13 of 163
Harvard: 16 of 277
Princeton: 21 of 307
Penn: 36 of 441
Stanford: 16 of 296
U of Chicago: 23 of 221
Yale: 30 of 296
High app totals for Penn. Maybe it's the popularity of Wharton among young men? And look at Cornell - maybe people take a shot at an Ivy acceptance by throwing in an application there? With such similar application totals, it's a little hard to escape the feeling that the same bunch of kids were applying to Brown, Columbia, Harvard, Princeton, Stanford and Yale.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It's interesting, but not sure how you use it for college selection. You have no idea of the stats of those accepted/rejected. It is also hard to tell how many acceptances are accounted for by the same student. For example, if three kids get into each of HYP, is that the same three kids or nine separate kids? Although it has its own issues, matriculation stats would in many ways be more interesting.
the other thing i noticed was the differentials in acceptance even with similar numbers applying. for example, wootton, (which has a lot of asians and immigrant families) has no kids accepted to yale, yet whitman and walter johnson do. could be legacy application bonuses coming into play here.
Anonymous wrote:UVA is on the same level as Georgetown, Wash U, and Cornell in Maryland. Pretty prestigious.