Anonymous wrote:BC games the system to make itself look more exclusive but it doesn't work. It is the tried and true formula...accept 2/3rds of your applicants by early decision. Those yield 100% obviously. The other 1/3rd are then picked from the vast majority of regular decision applicants, artificially lowering the acceptance rate.
There are very few colleges that take as many applicants early decision as does Boston College.
As for the comparison to Notre Dame and Georgetown...get real, that's a joke. BC is the safety for ND and Georgetown.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:William and Mary, hands down. Not even close.
First question is money. Do you have a ton? If so it changes the answer. If 90k a year is nothing to you either because it is saved already or you are rich or high income then BC is the answer hands down. On the other hand if the above is not accurate go instate to W&M. CWU would lose in either case unless your kid loved it and you can afford it.
Whoever said BC is a B+ school is nuts. Have you looked at stats?
only 28% bother to submit an SAT, my brother. They take 2/3rds of their class from early decision. They're not getting the best and brightest
Aww, this brother has trouble with fractions. For BC, 3/4 submitted test scores snd averaged over 1500.
You mean 28% a little over 1/4?
Facts. BC is ranked #37. 75% submitted test scores for the class of 2029. Average SAT was over 1500. Yes, it's expensive, especially compared to a state school. Case Western reports a COA at $92,130.
How would you even know about test scores for class of 29? That data hasn't yet been shared. The last CDS shared was for the class of 27, and that data showed 44% submitted test scores. 75% is an enormous number. Even Notre Dame is less than that.
Is your google broken?
Help me out then. If you have a link, share it. You can't because it doesn't exist.
literally came up in the first google search. you can do it!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:BC is nowhere near ND in any fashion- never was and never will be. It is closer to Villanova in prestige prior to Pope Leo. W&M is a bargain in comparison.
Here you are again rebutting arguments no one ever claimed. BC never ever claimed to be higher ranked or "more prestigious" than ND.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:William and Mary, hands down. Not even close.
First question is money. Do you have a ton? If so it changes the answer. If 90k a year is nothing to you either because it is saved already or you are rich or high income then BC is the answer hands down. On the other hand if the above is not accurate go instate to W&M. CWU would lose in either case unless your kid loved it and you can afford it.
Whoever said BC is a B+ school is nuts. Have you looked at stats?
only 28% bother to submit an SAT, my brother. They take 2/3rds of their class from early decision. They're not getting the best and brightest
Aww, this brother has trouble with fractions. For BC, 3/4 submitted test scores snd averaged over 1500.
You mean 28% a little over 1/4?
Facts. BC is ranked #37. 75% submitted test scores for the class of 2029. Average SAT was over 1500. Yes, it's expensive, especially compared to a state school. Case Western reports a COA at $92,130.
How would you even know about test scores for class of 29? That data hasn't yet been shared. The last CDS shared was for the class of 27, and that data showed 44% submitted test scores. 75% is an enormous number. Even Notre Dame is less than that.
Is your google broken?
Help me out then. If you have a link, share it. You can't because it doesn't exist.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:William and Mary, hands down. Not even close.
First question is money. Do you have a ton? If so it changes the answer. If 90k a year is nothing to you either because it is saved already or you are rich or high income then BC is the answer hands down. On the other hand if the above is not accurate go instate to W&M. CWU would lose in either case unless your kid loved it and you can afford it.
Whoever said BC is a B+ school is nuts. Have you looked at stats?
only 28% bother to submit an SAT, my brother. They take 2/3rds of their class from early decision. They're not getting the best and brightest
Aww, this brother has trouble with fractions. For BC, 3/4 submitted test scores snd averaged over 1500.
You mean 28% a little over 1/4?
Facts. BC is ranked #37. 75% submitted test scores for the class of 2029. Average SAT was over 1500. Yes, it's expensive, especially compared to a state school. Case Western reports a COA at $92,130.
How would you even know about test scores for class of 29? That data hasn't yet been shared. The last CDS shared was for the class of 27, and that data showed 44% submitted test scores. 75% is an enormous number. Even Notre Dame is less than that.
Is your google broken?
Anonymous wrote:To compare BC to Georgetown and ND is a big stretch.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:William and Mary, hands down. Not even close.
First question is money. Do you have a ton? If so it changes the answer. If 90k a year is nothing to you either because it is saved already or you are rich or high income then BC is the answer hands down. On the other hand if the above is not accurate go instate to W&M. CWU would lose in either case unless your kid loved it and you can afford it.
Whoever said BC is a B+ school is nuts. Have you looked at stats?
only 28% bother to submit an SAT, my brother. They take 2/3rds of their class from early decision. They're not getting the best and brightest
Aww, this brother has trouble with fractions. For BC, 3/4 submitted test scores snd averaged over 1500.
You mean 28% a little over 1/4?
Facts. BC is ranked #37. 75% submitted test scores for the class of 2029. Average SAT was over 1500. Yes, it's expensive, especially compared to a state school. Case Western reports a COA at $92,130.
How would you even know about test scores for class of 29? That data hasn't yet been shared. The last CDS shared was for the class of 27, and that data showed 44% submitted test scores. 75% is an enormous number. Even Notre Dame is less than that.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:William and Mary, hands down. Not even close.
First question is money. Do you have a ton? If so it changes the answer. If 90k a year is nothing to you either because it is saved already or you are rich or high income then BC is the answer hands down. On the other hand if the above is not accurate go instate to W&M. CWU would lose in either case unless your kid loved it and you can afford it.
Whoever said BC is a B+ school is nuts. Have you looked at stats?
only 28% bother to submit an SAT, my brother. They take 2/3rds of their class from early decision. They're not getting the best and brightest
Aww, this brother has trouble with fractions. For BC, 3/4 submitted test scores snd averaged over 1500.
You mean 28% a little over 1/4?
Facts. BC is ranked #37. 75% submitted test scores for the class of 2029. Average SAT was over 1500. Yes, it's expensive, especially compared to a state school. Case Western reports a COA at $92,130.
Anonymous wrote:To compare BC to Georgetown and ND is a big stretch.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Save money and go to W&M nicer weather and great history. Case is in Cleveland. BC is second level expensive Catholic university.
Oh look, we can use facts instead of fakery. BC is ranked #37 and Jesuit. W&M is public and less expensive. Case is indeed in Cleveland. All are well-regarded.
Anonymous wrote:You can't have your cake and eat it to. William & Mary might make more sense because of cost. But to also say it is a better school than BC is beyond the pale. Also keep in mind trajectories: William and Mary has gone down and is a way easier admit than 10-20 years ago. BC has gone way up -- and is still moving up.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:BC isn't where you go for math/science/CS.
That's why it pretty much as a nonexistent CS department. Maybe to study english lit or business, but not CS. But who is going to pay $90k for an english lit degree from a "meh" college?