Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:By percentage:
Why is NYU so low?
1. MIT 13.5%
2. Vanderbilt 11.3%
3. Harvard 9.7%
4. Yale 8%
5. USC 7.7%
6. Princeton 7.7%
7. Stanford 7.4%
8. Penn 6%
9. UT Dallas 5.5%
10. Duke 5.3%
11. Columbia 4.9%
12. Emory 4.7%
13. Dartmouth 4.4%
14. Florida 4.4%
15. Rice 4.3%
16. Brown 4%
17. Alabama 3.9%
18. Northeastern 3.9%
19. Northwestern 3.7%
20. Tufts 3.7%
21. Case Western 3.5%
22. Georgetown 3.5%
23. Johns Hopkins 3.4%
24. Carnegie Mellon 2.7%
25. Georgia Tech 2.5%
26. UMD 2.5%
27. UChicago 2.3%
28. Purdue 2.2%
29. BU 2.1%
30. Texas A&M 1.7%
31. Cornell 1.5%
32. UC Berkeley 1.4%
33. Miss State 1.2%
34. UCLA 1.2%
35. UCF 1.1%
36. USF 1.1%
37. BYU 1%
38. Georgia 1%
39. Michigan 1%
40. Clemson .9%
41. Missouri .9%
42. UT Austin .9%
43. UVA .9%
44. UNC .8%
45. Arizona .7%
46. Indiana .7%
47. NYU .7%
48. Ok State .7%
49. ASU .6%
50. Illinois .5%
51. Michigan State .5%'
52. Rutgers .5%
Thank you this looks more meaningful to me. Says which schools value test score.
It’s worth noting a lot of these schools offer additional scholarships for National Merit Scholars once they enroll. So among schools that don’t offer the bump, the top 10 would be:
1. MIT
2. Harvard
3. Yale
4. Princeton
5. Stanford
6. Penn
7. Duke
8. Columbia
9. Dartmouth
10. Rice
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:35 at UVA seems low.
Some states have considerably lower criteria for NMS -- VA, MD, DC always have very high bars--within the top 5.
Anonymous wrote:Can kids who are scholarships directly from NMSC able to get in to whatever college they want or is there stiff competition, even for them?
Anonymous wrote:If someone posted the link to the source I overlooked it…
This is random, but I noticed FSU is missing. UF is on there, but so are UCF and USF. Since Florida has the Bright Futures scholarship it makes sense they’d keep more of their NMFs, but FSU is usually 2nd to UF for in-state options.
Anonymous wrote:Can kids who are scholarships directly from NMSC able to get in to whatever college they want or is there stiff competition, even for them?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:By percentage:
Why is NYU so low?
1. MIT 13.5%
2. Vanderbilt 11.3%
3. Harvard 9.7%
4. Yale 8%
5. USC 7.7%
6. Princeton 7.7%
7. Stanford 7.4%
8. Penn 6%
9. UT Dallas 5.5%
10. Duke 5.3%
11. Columbia 4.9%
12. Emory 4.7%
13. Dartmouth 4.4%
14. Florida 4.4%
15. Rice 4.3%
16. Brown 4%
17. Alabama 3.9%
18. Northeastern 3.9%
19. Northwestern 3.7%
20. Tufts 3.7%
21. Case Western 3.5%
22. Georgetown 3.5%
23. Johns Hopkins 3.4%
24. Carnegie Mellon 2.7%
25. Georgia Tech 2.5%
26. UMD 2.5%
27. UChicago 2.3%
28. Purdue 2.2%
29. BU 2.1%
30. Texas A&M 1.7%
31. Cornell 1.5%
32. UC Berkeley 1.4%
33. Miss State 1.2%
34. UCLA 1.2%
35. UCF 1.1%
36. USF 1.1%
37. BYU 1%
38. Georgia 1%
39. Michigan 1%
40. Clemson .9%
41. Missouri .9%
42. UT Austin .9%
43. UVA .9%
44. UNC .8%
45. Arizona .7%
46. Indiana .7%
47. NYU .7%
48. Ok State .7%
49. ASU .6%
50. Illinois .5%
51. Michigan State .5%'
52. Rutgers .5%
Thank you this looks more meaningful to me. Says which schools value test score.
Anonymous wrote:By percentage:
Why is NYU so low?
1. MIT 13.5%
2. Vanderbilt 11.3%
3. Harvard 9.7%
4. Yale 8%
5. USC 7.7%
6. Princeton 7.7%
7. Stanford 7.4%
8. Penn 6%
9. UT Dallas 5.5%
10. Duke 5.3%
11. Columbia 4.9%
12. Emory 4.7%
13. Dartmouth 4.4%
14. Florida 4.4%
15. Rice 4.3%
16. Brown 4%
17. Alabama 3.9%
18. Northeastern 3.9%
19. Northwestern 3.7%
20. Tufts 3.7%
21. Case Western 3.5%
22. Georgetown 3.5%
23. Johns Hopkins 3.4%
24. Carnegie Mellon 2.7%
25. Georgia Tech 2.5%
26. UMD 2.5%
27. UChicago 2.3%
28. Purdue 2.2%
29. BU 2.1%
30. Texas A&M 1.7%
31. Cornell 1.5%
32. UC Berkeley 1.4%
33. Miss State 1.2%
34. UCLA 1.2%
35. UCF 1.1%
36. USF 1.1%
37. BYU 1%
38. Georgia 1%
39. Michigan 1%
40. Clemson .9%
41. Missouri .9%
42. UT Austin .9%
43. UVA .9%
44. UNC .8%
45. Arizona .7%
46. Indiana .7%
47. NYU .7%
48. Ok State .7%
49. ASU .6%
50. Illinois .5%
51. Michigan State .5%'
52. Rutgers .5%
Anonymous wrote:Does Fordham no longer do full tuition for NMF?
Anonymous wrote:
TECHNICALITY
Let's not forget that unless you secure a merit scholarship, from college, from merit foundation or from your parent's employer or charity/community organization, you stay finalist, won't become scholar.
As top colleges don't give merit money, they don't inflate scholar numbers, only show scholars who become scholar from finalist through outside scholarship.
Schools like Alabama and Florida, give each of their finalist applicant some merit money and claim highest numbers of merit scholars.
It would only be fair if we can see where top 2% of National Merit Scholars who get merit money from national merit foundation itself, go to which colleges.