Anonymous wrote:Okay, so maybe not Yale but I do remember this from a lot of the elite colleges we visited.
Anonymous wrote:The difference is international students are not evaluated on a need-blind basis at an otherwise need-blind school.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I know a person from a medium-rich country (GDP per capital similar to Brazil) who got accepted at the number schools (pretty much everywhere except Harvard) all with all her costs covered. Now she is a very good student though didn't pass the entrance exam to the best magnet. Regardless... the thing is, this girl is not poor not by any stretch. Her father is a very highly ranked government official (like Supreme Court justice type) and they live a very charmed life comparable to upper west side family. But because the country is rraltively she appears poor because her fathers salary appears low (yet it affords so much more).
International applicants get need based scholarships? I thought they were full freight.
Anonymous wrote:I know a person from a medium-rich country (GDP per capital similar to Brazil) who got accepted at the number schools (pretty much everywhere except Harvard) all with all her costs covered. Now she is a very good student though didn't pass the entrance exam to the best magnet. Regardless... the thing is, this girl is not poor not by any stretch. Her father is a very highly ranked government official (like Supreme Court justice type) and they live a very charmed life comparable to upper west side family. But because the country is rraltively she appears poor because her fathers salary appears low (yet it affords so much more).
Anonymous wrote:The Common App should limit the number of colleges.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The Common App should limit the number of colleges.
Never going to happen. That means it would limit the application fees each college gets. They aren't going to give up that free money.
Anonymous wrote:The Common App should limit the number of colleges.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I don't think this explains it. At most there twice as many graduates. But acceptance rates fell from over 50% to less than 10% at many schools.
Part of the reason is that it is so much easier to apply to lots of schools than it used to be. The Common App has enabled students to add schools to the roster with ease and little effort (and sometimes no money at all).
Anonymous wrote:I don't think this explains it. At most there twice as many graduates. But acceptance rates fell from over 50% to less than 10% at many schools.