Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Be careful of ED to Pomona. It is a very small admit rate (only 13% in spite of all the athletic admits, of which there are comparatively quite a few).
What will really help your application is if you can submit an SAT score above 1550.
155 students submit an SAT score, with only 39 students in the entire Pomona freshman class scoring above that.
I know kids with very high SAT scores who didn't get in. Maybe Pomona doesn't care much about SAT.
Our kid with a 1600 was rejected last year.
No offense, Pomona was probably thinking why this person applied there. Only 55 freshman have an SAT score above 1550, so most likely fewer than 10 students have above a 1580, never mind a 1600.
Anonymous wrote:Interested in personal experiences that relates these two colleges. DD is interested in the consortium element, a strong culture in both the humanities and stem, a major in linguistics (coursework in computational neuroscience or mathematical bio), access to outdoors. We loved both tours, and found them great places for an undergraduate education.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Be careful of ED to Pomona. It is a very small admit rate (only 13% in spite of all the athletic admits, of which there are comparatively quite a few).
What will really help your application is if you can submit an SAT score above 1550.
155 students submit an SAT score, with only 39 students in the entire Pomona freshman class scoring above that.
I know kids with very high SAT scores who didn't get in. Maybe Pomona doesn't care much about SAT.
Our kid with a 1600 was rejected last year.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Be careful of ED to Pomona. It is a very small admit rate (only 13% in spite of all the athletic admits, of which there are comparatively quite a few).
What will really help your application is if you can submit an SAT score above 1550.
155 students submit an SAT score, with only 39 students in the entire Pomona freshman class scoring above that.
I know kids with very high SAT scores who didn't get in. Maybe Pomona doesn't care much about SAT.
Our kid with a 1600 was rejected last year.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Be careful of ED to Pomona. It is a very small admit rate (only 13% in spite of all the athletic admits, of which there are comparatively quite a few).
What will really help your application is if you can submit an SAT score above 1550.
155 students submit an SAT score, with only 39 students in the entire Pomona freshman class scoring above that.
I know kids with very high SAT scores who didn't get in. Maybe Pomona doesn't care much about SAT.
Anonymous wrote:Be careful of ED to Pomona. It is a very small admit rate (only 13% in spite of all the athletic admits, of which there are comparatively quite a few).
What will really help your application is if you can submit an SAT score above 1550.
155 students submit an SAT score, with only 39 students in the entire Pomona freshman class scoring above that.
Anonymous wrote:I also have a kid at one of the other schools in the 5-C consortium. Not only do they share classes, but they commingle in clubs and can use any of the dining halls. Sometimes when I’m describing it to people who are not familiar with it, I tell them it’s like a midsize school with five specialty schools, such as business and engineering. I would also say that the weather in California is significantly better than Massachusetts lol.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Amherst is a stellar school and experience. And their brand new student center will open next Fall. Pomona is also building a brand new global center but it will start construction next Fall and it won't be built or ready for several years. It will demolish the Oldenberg center for language so if that was of interest in Pomona, expect a lot of construction/demolition for the next few years.
Oldenborg is just the dorm space and you lose one dining hall (oh no there’s only 6 left!). The programming, lecture series, etc will continue in frank dining hall. It’ll be ready in summer 2027, which is for great, because if your child is choosing Pomona right now, they couldn’t have entered Oldenborg until the 2027-2028 school year anyway.
Oldenborg is also the dining hall that was unique for linguistic/language interested college kids because they had language themed lunch tables. Sad that will be closed next year and possibly longer.
Anonymous wrote:It sounds like a good idea to apply to Pomona. There's a few faculty she may want to take a course with/do research with: https://zhulab.sites.pomona.edu, https://www.shannonmburns.com/#about, https://sci.sites.pomona.edu, https://zenkavi.github.io, https://gabrielcook.xyz/cdvlab/, https://www1.cmc.edu/pages/faculty/clreed/, https://www.umanathlab.com, https://natsci.claremont.edu/employees/neuroscience/michael-spezio/, https://www.drstaceywood.com/wood-lab/
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Both good options, but you have a minor chance in hell getting into either.
It’s a lot easier getting into Pomona than Amherst, since Pomona hardly gets DC applications.
Anonymous wrote:Both good options, but you have a minor chance in hell getting into either.