Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Not many top talent phds coming from the “good” lacs.
8 out of top 10 per capita are SLACs. You are an idiot.
https://www.collegetransitions.com/dataverse/top-feeders-phd-programs#total-phd
Okay? You didn’t combat my point. Please work on your reading comprehension.
New poster, here. You made a claim without any support about lack of “top talent” from SLACs. Do you have evidence for this assertion? I went from a top 10 SLAC to a fully funded top 5 PhD program. SLACs were extremely well represented in my cohort.
You will not find lac grads at the top PhD programs in STEM.
Evidence?
It's not true. My D went to Pomona and these were some of the PhD destinations from peers in his graduating class
Astrophysics Berkeley
Math MIT
Math Berkeley x 2
Math Stanford
Chemistry Princeton
Chemistry CalTech
Chemistry Stanford
CS Carnegie Mellon
MD PhD Harvard
Pomona has not had a math major go to MIT in the last Decade…
The one I know is in class of 2018 (Pomona) so, actually, they have.
So mythical people
Several people above have posted links to Pomona grads at MIT right now. You've lost this one, buddy. Beat it.
LinkedIn profiles with no photo and identifiable information. It’s really obvious these are bot accounts.
Get a life, loser. Stop with the pathetic strawmen, then refusing to admit that you were beaten with your own strawman. Your goalposts are on skates.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Not many top talent phds coming from the “good” lacs.
8 out of top 10 per capita are SLACs. You are an idiot.
https://www.collegetransitions.com/dataverse/top-feeders-phd-programs#total-phd
Okay? You didn’t combat my point. Please work on your reading comprehension.
New poster, here. You made a claim without any support about lack of “top talent” from SLACs. Do you have evidence for this assertion? I went from a top 10 SLAC to a fully funded top 5 PhD program. SLACs were extremely well represented in my cohort.
You will not find lac grads at the top PhD programs in STEM.
Evidence?
It's not true. My D went to Pomona and these were some of the PhD destinations from peers in his graduating class
Astrophysics Berkeley
Math MIT
Math Berkeley x 2
Math Stanford
Chemistry Princeton
Chemistry CalTech
Chemistry Stanford
CS Carnegie Mellon
MD PhD Harvard
Pomona has not had a math major go to MIT in the last Decade…
The one I know is in class of 2018 (Pomona) so, actually, they have.
So mythical people
Several people above have posted links to Pomona grads at MIT right now. You've lost this one, buddy. Beat it.
LinkedIn profiles with no photo and identifiable information. It’s really obvious these are bot accounts.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Not many top talent phds coming from the “good” lacs.
8 out of top 10 per capita are SLACs. You are an idiot.
https://www.collegetransitions.com/dataverse/top-feeders-phd-programs#total-phd
Okay? You didn’t combat my point. Please work on your reading comprehension.
New poster, here. You made a claim without any support about lack of “top talent” from SLACs. Do you have evidence for this assertion? I went from a top 10 SLAC to a fully funded top 5 PhD program. SLACs were extremely well represented in my cohort.
You will not find lac grads at the top PhD programs in STEM.
Evidence?
It's not true. My D went to Pomona and these were some of the PhD destinations from peers in his graduating class
Astrophysics Berkeley
Math MIT
Math Berkeley x 2
Math Stanford
Chemistry Princeton
Chemistry CalTech
Chemistry Stanford
CS Carnegie Mellon
MD PhD Harvard
Pomona has not had a math major go to MIT in the last Decade…
The one I know is in class of 2018 (Pomona) so, actually, they have.
So mythical people
Several people above have posted links to Pomona grads at MIT right now. You've lost this one, buddy. Beat it.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Not many top talent phds coming from the “good” lacs.
8 out of top 10 per capita are SLACs. You are an idiot.
https://www.collegetransitions.com/dataverse/top-feeders-phd-programs#total-phd
Okay? You didn’t combat my point. Please work on your reading comprehension.
New poster, here. You made a claim without any support about lack of “top talent” from SLACs. Do you have evidence for this assertion? I went from a top 10 SLAC to a fully funded top 5 PhD program. SLACs were extremely well represented in my cohort.
You will not find lac grads at the top PhD programs in STEM.
Evidence?
It's not true. My D went to Pomona and these were some of the PhD destinations from peers in his graduating class
Astrophysics Berkeley
Math MIT
Math Berkeley x 2
Math Stanford
Chemistry Princeton
Chemistry CalTech
Chemistry Stanford
CS Carnegie Mellon
MD PhD Harvard
Pomona has not had a math major go to MIT in the last Decade…
The one I know is in class of 2018 (Pomona) so, actually, they have.
So mythical people
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:WASP-B data on MCPS applications/admits/attending from the most recent cycle.
https://bethesdamagazine.com/2025/09/10/mcps-students-college/
Amherst, 52 /4 /4 7.7% acceptance rate
Bowdoin 47/ 10/ 7 21% acceptance rate
Pomona 34 / 2/ 1 5.8% acceptance rate
Swarthmore 64/ 10/ 5 15.6% acceptance rate
Williams 54 / 5/ 2 9% acceptance rate
Swarthmore is the most popular application, Pomona the least. Amherst and Bowdoin have the highest yield.
In terms of strategy, Bowdoin then Swarthmore are the way to go. PAW very tough admits, keeping in mind that AW stats definitely include recruited athletes as well.
Why does Pomona take so few
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:WASP-B data on MCPS applications/admits/attending from the most recent cycle.
https://bethesdamagazine.com/2025/09/10/mcps-students-college/
Amherst, 52 /4 /4 7.7% acceptance rate
Bowdoin 47/ 10/ 7 21% acceptance rate
Pomona 34 / 2/ 1 5.8% acceptance rate
Swarthmore 64/ 10/ 5 15.6% acceptance rate
Williams 54 / 5/ 2 9% acceptance rate
Swarthmore is the most popular application, Pomona the least. Amherst and Bowdoin have the highest yield.
In terms of strategy, Bowdoin then Swarthmore are the way to go. PAW very tough admits, keeping in mind that AW stats definitely include recruited athletes as well.
Middlebury: 57/7/2 (12% acceptance rate)
Colby: 39/10/5 (26% acceptance rate)
Bates: 28/10/5 (36% acceptance rate)
Wesleyan: 55/18/10 (33% acceptance rate)
Hamilton: 25/10/7 (40% acceptance rate)
Carleton: 27/15/7 (56% acceptance rate)
Haverford: 37/11/5 (30% acceptance rate)
Davidson: 39/5/3 (13% acceptance rate)
Interesting. We don't know how many of the 57 who applied to Middlebury were ED, but we can presume that 5 of the 7 accepted applied RD (since they didn't matriculate). Maybe Midd isn't as safe a bet in ED as people on this site make it out to be.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Not many top talent phds coming from the “good” lacs.
8 out of top 10 per capita are SLACs. You are an idiot.
https://www.collegetransitions.com/dataverse/top-feeders-phd-programs#total-phd
Okay? You didn’t combat my point. Please work on your reading comprehension.
New poster, here. You made a claim without any support about lack of “top talent” from SLACs. Do you have evidence for this assertion? I went from a top 10 SLAC to a fully funded top 5 PhD program. SLACs were extremely well represented in my cohort.
You will not find lac grads at the top PhD programs in STEM.
Evidence?
It's not true. My D went to Pomona and these were some of the PhD destinations from peers in his graduating class
Astrophysics Berkeley
Math MIT
Math Berkeley x 2
Math Stanford
Chemistry Princeton
Chemistry CalTech
Chemistry Stanford
CS Carnegie Mellon
MD PhD Harvard
Pomona has not had a math major go to MIT in the last Decade…
The one I know is in class of 2018 (Pomona) so, actually, they have.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:WASP-B data on MCPS applications/admits/attending from the most recent cycle.
https://bethesdamagazine.com/2025/09/10/mcps-students-college/
Amherst, 52 /4 /4 7.7% acceptance rate
Bowdoin 47/ 10/ 7 21% acceptance rate
Pomona 34 / 2/ 1 5.8% acceptance rate
Swarthmore 64/ 10/ 5 15.6% acceptance rate
Williams 54 / 5/ 2 9% acceptance rate
Swarthmore is the most popular application, Pomona the least. Amherst and Bowdoin have the highest yield.
In terms of strategy, Bowdoin then Swarthmore are the way to go. PAW very tough admits, keeping in mind that AW stats definitely include recruited athletes as well.
Middlebury: 57/7/2 (12% acceptance rate)
Colby: 39/10/5 (26% acceptance rate)
Bates: 28/10/5 (36% acceptance rate)
Wesleyan: 55/18/10 (33% acceptance rate)
Hamilton: 25/10/7 (40% acceptance rate)
Carleton: 27/15/7 (56% acceptance rate)
Haverford: 37/11/5 (30% acceptance rate)
Davidson: 39/5/3 (13% acceptance rate)
Anonymous wrote:Also, https://math.mit.edu/directory/profile.html?pid=2693 is a Pomona grad
Anonymous wrote:WASP-B data on MCPS applications/admits/attending from the most recent cycle.
https://bethesdamagazine.com/2025/09/10/mcps-students-college/
Amherst, 52 /4 /4 7.7% acceptance rate
Bowdoin 47/ 10/ 7 21% acceptance rate
Pomona 34 / 2/ 1 5.8% acceptance rate
Swarthmore 64/ 10/ 5 15.6% acceptance rate
Williams 54 / 5/ 2 9% acceptance rate
Swarthmore is the most popular application, Pomona the least. Amherst and Bowdoin have the highest yield.
In terms of strategy, Bowdoin then Swarthmore are the way to go. PAW very tough admits, keeping in mind that AW stats definitely include recruited athletes as well.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Not many top talent phds coming from the “good” lacs.
8 out of top 10 per capita are SLACs. You are an idiot.
https://www.collegetransitions.com/dataverse/top-feeders-phd-programs#total-phd
Okay? You didn’t combat my point. Please work on your reading comprehension.
New poster, here. You made a claim without any support about lack of “top talent” from SLACs. Do you have evidence for this assertion? I went from a top 10 SLAC to a fully funded top 5 PhD program. SLACs were extremely well represented in my cohort.
You will not find lac grads at the top PhD programs in STEM.
Evidence?
It's not true. My D went to Pomona and these were some of the PhD destinations from peers in his graduating class
Astrophysics Berkeley
Math MIT
Math Berkeley x 2
Math Stanford
Chemistry Princeton
Chemistry CalTech
Chemistry Stanford
CS Carnegie Mellon
MD PhD Harvard
Pomona has not had a math major go to MIT in the last Decade…