Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Do you have legacy? Student is at one of their preferred schools? MD or DC
Publics and privates also have much better chances than VA students.
Athletes as pp mentioned are in this pool, too.
OP here. Why would MD or DC students have better odds than VA?[b] DC is at a MD private.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Chapel Hill will consider legacy preference for OOS applicants only. OOS athletes do NOT count towards the 8% OOS cap for incoming freshmen are are lumped in with the instate freshman for the state requirement calculations. If Carolina exceeds the 8% OOS incoming freshmen limit it just pay a fine.
This is all public info and not some secret. Do your research. Google in your friend here.
You do your research. The oos acceptance rate is indeed 8 percent. The oos cap is 18 percent and does not include athletes. They are obviously not the same statistic.
Yes 18% OOS cap with 82% instate (combined with OOS athlete) minimum. As you can see I had many typos, thank you for pointing it out (even if you’re super rude, must be a dookie)
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Chapel Hill will consider legacy preference for OOS applicants only. OOS athletes do NOT count towards the 8% OOS cap for incoming freshmen are are lumped in with the instate freshman for the state requirement calculations. If Carolina exceeds the 8% OOS incoming freshmen limit it just pay a fine.
This is all public info and not some secret. Do your research. Google in your friend here.
You do your research. The oos acceptance rate is indeed 8 percent. The oos cap is 18 percent and does not include athletes. They are obviously not the same statistic.
OOS limit is 18 percent and legacy tip only counts for OOS applications. Acceptance rate for OOS legacy has been roughly 40 percent for some time, much higher than non-legacy. But this rate might reflect, in part, the quality of the applicants.
The number of OOS applicants who are legacy is a tiny fraction of the overall pool of OOS applications. The higher rate of acceptance for legacy OOS applicants does not affect the overall composition of the incoming class very much.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Chapel Hill will consider legacy preference for OOS applicants only. OOS athletes do NOT count towards the 8% OOS cap for incoming freshmen are are lumped in with the instate freshman for the state requirement calculations. If Carolina exceeds the 8% OOS incoming freshmen limit it just pay a fine.
This is all public info and not some secret. Do your research. Google in your friend here.
You do your research. The oos acceptance rate is indeed 8 percent. The oos cap is 18 percent and does not include athletes. They are obviously not the same statistic.
Yes 18% OOS cap with 82% instate (combined with OOS athlete) minimum. As you can see I had many typos, thank you for pointing it out (even if you’re super rude, must be a dookie)
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Chapel Hill will consider legacy preference for OOS applicants only. OOS athletes do NOT count towards the 8% OOS cap for incoming freshmen are are lumped in with the instate freshman for the state requirement calculations. If Carolina exceeds the 8% OOS incoming freshmen limit it just pay a fine.
This is all public info and not some secret. Do your research. Google in your friend here.
You do your research. The oos acceptance rate is indeed 8 percent. The oos cap is 18 percent and does not include athletes. They are obviously not the same statistic.
Anonymous wrote:Chapel Hill will consider legacy preference for OOS applicants only. OOS athletes do NOT count towards the 8% OOS cap for incoming freshmen are are lumped in with the instate freshman for the state requirement calculations. If Carolina exceeds the 8% OOS incoming freshmen limit it just pay a fine.
This is all public info and not some secret. Do your research. Google in your friend here.
Again, another era. If they didn’t apply the last two cycles, it truly isn’t relevant.