Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:To be quite frank, no one is going to look at a schools like Wisconsin and Utah and think there is that much of a difference. They are both state schools. They are both very large. They are not very selective at all.
49% is different from 87%
And OOS acceptance at Wisconsin is 18%
Where are you getting 18%? CDS?
https://www.dailycardinal.com/article/2023/10/uw-madison-has-a-selectivity-problem-in-state-students-pay-the-price?ct=content_open&cv=cbox_latest
"UW-Madison has become increasingly more selective with the student body they admit. The university’s acceptance rate has fallen from 67% to 49% in the past decade. This number takes an even steeper drop when you take into account the out-of-state acceptance rate falling to roughly 18%."
Here’s what the latest (2023) CDS indicates …
42.7% OOS acceptance rate (17,705 / 41,490)
19.8% OOS yield (3,506 / 17,706)
Int’l is 31.9% and 16.4%, respectively.
18%? Not even close.
That yield is embarrassingly low
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:To be quite frank, no one is going to look at a schools like Wisconsin and Utah and think there is that much of a difference. They are both state schools. They are both very large. They are not very selective at all.
49% is different from 87%
And OOS acceptance at Wisconsin is 18%
Where are you getting 18%? CDS?
https://www.dailycardinal.com/article/2023/10/uw-madison-has-a-selectivity-problem-in-state-students-pay-the-price?ct=content_open&cv=cbox_latest
"UW-Madison has become increasingly more selective with the student body they admit. The university’s acceptance rate has fallen from 67% to 49% in the past decade. This number takes an even steeper drop when you take into account the out-of-state acceptance rate falling to roughly 18%."
Here’s what the latest (2023) CDS indicates …
42.7% OOS acceptance rate (17,705 / 41,490)
19.8% OOS yield (3,506 / 17,706)
Int’l is 31.9% and 16.4%, respectively.
18%? Not even close.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:To be quite frank, no one is going to look at a schools like Wisconsin and Utah and think there is that much of a difference. They are both state schools. They are both very large. They are not very selective at all.
49% is different from 87%
And OOS acceptance at Wisconsin is 18%
Where are you getting 18%? CDS?
https://www.dailycardinal.com/article/2023/10/uw-madison-has-a-selectivity-problem-in-state-students-pay-the-price?ct=content_open&cv=cbox_latest
"UW-Madison has become increasingly more selective with the student body they admit. The university’s acceptance rate has fallen from 67% to 49% in the past decade. This number takes an even steeper drop when you take into account the out-of-state acceptance rate falling to roughly 18%."
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:To be quite frank, no one is going to look at a schools like Wisconsin and Utah and think there is that much of a difference. They are both state schools. They are both very large. They are not very selective at all.
49% is different from 87%
And OOS acceptance at Wisconsin is 18%
Where are you getting 18%? CDS?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:There's really no comparison. Wisconsin has had 20 Nobel Laureates, is classified as a top producer of Fulbright grants, and ranks 16th in number of alums winning MacArthur Genius grants. It is a T-50. I am an academic, and I don't know anyone who would consider Utah and Wisconsin comparable.
All those metrics are worthless to employers other than the business and law schools rankings.
Haha, thanks for the laugh.