Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I don't get it. If a kid applies to a school and he gets admitted (whether to the main or another alternative campus), the kid is admitted, period. You can't pretend he was rejected.
Which is why if you look at your kid’s Naviance or SCOIR, you’ll likely see a significantly higher admission rate than what Northeastern reports. Because of course if the kid is accepted, regardless of if it was Boston or Oakland or whatever, they report that they were accepted. I think our (public) high school’s acceptance rate to Northeastern is like 28%.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Like or don't like, but Northeastern is getting more than 100,000 applicants per year. I went to college in Boston back in the day when Northeastern was a commuter school for kids in Revere that wanted to become cops. Northeastern has come a long way since then. Good for them. They seem to understand what students want these days. A lot of universities are envious.
BTW, speaking of 'cops', because of that tradition, Northeastern is highly ranked for its Criminal Justice major. It has its own School of Criminology & Criminal Justice.
Exactly, on Scoir our private school's acceptance rate to NEU is 39%, not the 5% they report to USNWR.
Anonymous wrote:Like or don't like, but Northeastern is getting more than 100,000 applicants per year. I went to college in Boston back in the day when Northeastern was a commuter school for kids in Revere that wanted to become cops. Northeastern has come a long way since then. Good for them. They seem to understand what students want these days. A lot of universities are envious.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Like or don't like, but Northeastern is getting more than 100,000 applicants per year. I went to college in Boston back in the day when Northeastern was a commuter school for kids in Revere that wanted to become cops. Northeastern has come a long way since then. Good for them. They seem to understand what students want these days. A lot of universities are envious.
BTW, speaking of 'cops', because of that tradition, Northeastern is highly ranked for its Criminal Justice major. It has its own School of Criminology & Criminal Justice.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Take it with an obvious grain of salt as this was an Instagram post from a college advisor and quasi-influencer, but I happen to agree with the substance:
Northeastern isn’t a bad school. They just LIE, a lot.
That 5% acceptance rate is completely manufactured. They only count students admitted to the Boston campus. Meanwhile thousands more get accepted into NUin, Global Scholars, London, Oakland, and now NYC. For the class of 2028 alone, only about 2,700 students were admitted to Boston, but over 3,300 more got in through those other programs that conveniently don’t show up in the number. If you count everyone they actually accept, the real rate is way higher than 5%. And be honest, who’s dreaming of spending their freshman year at Northeastern’s Oakland campus? Nobody applied to Northeastern for that.
They’ve rigged the front end too. No supplemental essays. Test optional. Applying to Northeastern is basically a one-click process through the Common App, which is exactly the point. The more unqualified applicants they attract, the lower that rate looks on paper.
Total cost of attendance at Northeastern runs around $90–94K a year. Harvard is about $87K with WAY more aid at Harvard. You’re paying more than Harvard for a degree that no one is that impressed by.
Now I already know the Northeastern crowd is gonna flood my comments bragging about their co-ops. A co-op is an internship. That’s it. The rest of us can apply for internships on our own, graduate on time, and we don’t have to pay $94,000 a year for the privilege.
Now is Northeastern worth going to sometimes? Yes. Of course. If it’s your LOWEST cost option. At least then you’re getting value for your money🤷♂️
This paragraph both complains about the "artificial" acceptance rate for the school because it's just for the Boston campus AND complains that no one wants to go anywhere but to the Boston campus - so to me that acceptance rate is exactly the information that this quasi-influencer says applicants should need. If "nobody" wants to go to any of the other programs NEU is doing applicants a favor by not including that data in their acceptance rate.
My family has no interest in NEU, but they also are no where near the only school who plays these games and charges these dollars.
The notion that NEU is doing this for transparency and altruistic reasons is obviously disingenuous. They are doing it to artificially manipulate rankings while concurrently maximizing revenue from their conscientious strategy of adding capacity outside of Boston for lower-stats, full-pay kids that think they're getting into an incredibly competitive institution. I have no issue with the philosophy of the school - I think the co-op program is great. I am, however, repulsed by the blatantly misleading manipulation of the rankings that should be smarter and more nuanced but are not.
To a tie for 46th in its U.S. News category?
I do know NEU requires 6 month co-ops or 2 alternatives, correct me if I’m wrong, but they can opt for community service or global outreach programs.Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Not sure how different what northeastern does is compared to other schools with alternative starts but I do know (from the employer end) that a young person who has done a 6+ month coops is generally a lot more appealing than one who has done a 2 month internship.
🤔 4 year University, mine (and most of his peers) had 2 month internships all 4 years at 4 different companies. Class of 2025 grads achieved a 96% landed rate immediately to within 6 months. Business school 98% / Liberal Arts 94%
That’s not the same as 6 months at the same company (or 6 months at two different companies) as you surely know.
Anonymous wrote:I don't get it. If a kid applies to a school and he gets admitted (whether to the main or another alternative campus), the kid is admitted, period. You can't pretend he was rejected.
Anonymous wrote:Like or don't like, but Northeastern is getting more than 100,000 applicants per year. I went to college in Boston back in the day when Northeastern was a commuter school for kids in Revere that wanted to become cops. Northeastern has come a long way since then. Good for them. They seem to understand what students want these days. A lot of universities are envious.
Anonymous wrote:Like or don't like, but Northeastern is getting more than 100,000 applicants per year. I went to college in Boston back in the day when Northeastern was a commuter school for kids in Revere that wanted to become cops. Northeastern has come a long way since then. Good for them. They seem to understand what students want these days. A lot of universities are envious.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Not sure how different what northeastern does is compared to other schools with alternative starts but I do know (from the employer end) that a young person who has done a 6+ month coops is generally a lot more appealing than one who has done a 2 month internship.
🤔 4 year University, mine (and most of his peers) had 2 month internships all 4 years at 4 different companies. Class of 2025 grads achieved a 96% landed rate immediately to within 6 months. Business school 98% / Liberal Arts 94%
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Not sure how different what northeastern does is compared to other schools with alternative starts but I do know (from the employer end) that a young person who has done a 6+ month coops is generally a lot more appealing than one who has done a 2 month internship.
🤔 4 year University, mine (and most of his peers) had 2 month internships all 4 years at 4 different companies. Class of 2025 grads achieved a 96% landed rate immediately to within 6 months. Business school 98% / Liberal Arts 94%
Anonymous wrote:Not sure how different what northeastern does is compared to other schools with alternative starts but I do know (from the employer end) that a young person who has done a 6+ month coops is generally a lot more appealing than one who has done a 2 month internship.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:And yet, over 100,000 students have applied to Northeastern for the past couple of years. And, only a few thousand are accepted to Boston (and attend).
So bash away, but the kids who attend are top students, do amazing co-ops and get good jobs, including my child
No one said it’s a a bad school. This is a school ranked lower than UMd that pretends it is super selective with these games. As a result, you have people wanting to spend $100k for the wrong reasons.
It's popular and selective for reasons. People are not dumb especially when they shell out $100K.
Don't worry about other people's lives.
Actually we will never know how selective it is because of their games.
I learned a lot from this site about college admissions so just trying to give back.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:And yet, over 100,000 students have applied to Northeastern for the past couple of years. And, only a few thousand are accepted to Boston (and attend).
So bash away, but the kids who attend are top students, do amazing co-ops and get good jobs, including my child
No one said it’s a a bad school. This is a school ranked lower than UMd that pretends it is super selective with these games. As a result, you have people wanting to spend $100k for the wrong reasons.
It's popular and selective for reasons. People are not dumb especially when they shell out $100K.
Don't worry about other people's lives.
Sure people aren't dumb, but they clearly have different priorities. Co-op was not something that sold my kid on the school. It sounded gimmicky and shallow. He wanted to know about the actual college experience and quality of the professors. My kid attended a much higher ranked school and had internships in college...no problem. He did't need the built in co-op. I think we may have spent less in tuition as well!