Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Top 10% of the class to have a serious shot. Extended to top 15% if an unusual circumstance.
Students outside the top 20% don't bother applying
And yes, even if school systems say they don't rank, a hierarchy exsists
The numbers say 20-30%.
My dc just enrolled at UVA. The President Teresa sullivan said at convocation last evening that 90% of the class is in the top 10% of their high school class. Students come from 45 states and 100+ countries. The NoVa number of students is 100 less than it was for last year which is not a good trend for those applying from NoVa. Only two got in from his school and both enrolled.
Do you know why? It can't possibly be because NOVA students are less qualified than last year or because the number of NOVA students applying has reduced. So why?
affirmative action.
this time it is geographic in nature.
politically driven to give the hillbillies things they didn't earn (but will say they did by their own merit).
VA resident here who is perfectly fine with "affirmative action" that gives opportunities to teens statewide.
If you're so sure your kid is more qualified than the kids from "hillybilly" schools, why so bitter? Your kid is already ahead in the game.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Top 10% of the class to have a serious shot. Extended to top 15% if an unusual circumstance.
Students outside the top 20% don't bother applying
And yes, even if school systems say they don't rank, a hierarchy exsists
The numbers say 20-30%.
My dc just enrolled at UVA. The President Teresa sullivan said at convocation last evening that 90% of the class is in the top 10% of their high school class. Students come from 45 states and 100+ countries. The NoVa number of students is 100 less than it was for last year which is not a good trend for those applying from NoVa. Only two got in from his school and both enrolled.
Do you know why? It can't possibly be because NOVA students are less qualified than last year or because the number of NOVA students applying has reduced. So why?
affirmative action.
this time it is geographic in nature.
politically driven to give the hillbillies things they didn't earn (but will say they did by their own merit).
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Top 10% of the class to have a serious shot. Extended to top 15% if an unusual circumstance.
Students outside the top 20% don't bother applying
And yes, even if school systems say they don't rank, a hierarchy exsists
The numbers say 20-30%.
My dc just enrolled at UVA. The President Teresa sullivan said at convocation last evening that 90% of the class is in the top 10% of their high school class. Students come from 45 states and 100+ countries. The NoVa number of students is 100 less than it was for last year which is not a good trend for those applying from NoVa. Only two got in from his school and both enrolled.
Do you know why? It can't possibly be because NOVA students are less qualified than last year or because the number of NOVA students applying has reduced. So why?
Source? The president wouldn't have announced that.The NoVa number of students is 100 less than it was for last year
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Top 10% of the class to have a serious shot. Extended to top 15% if an unusual circumstance.
Students outside the top 20% don't bother applying
And yes, even if school systems say they don't rank, a hierarchy exsists
The numbers say 20-30%.
My dc just enrolled at UVA. The President Teresa sullivan said at convocation last evening that 90% of the class is in the top 10% of their high school class. Students come from 45 states and 100+ countries. The NoVa number of students is 100 less than it was for last year which is not a good trend for those applying from NoVa. Only two got in from his school and both enrolled.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:TJ class of 2016 - about 450 students - 348 apply, 224 admitted, 80 enroll.
It is a safety for TJ students wanting to go to Ivies.
Anonymous wrote:TJ class of 2016 - about 450 students - 348 apply, 224 admitted, 80 enroll.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The spike in appications over the past few years is unbelievable.
Applications, yes- number of students going to college? No. So the yield rates have also dropped, which make it about the same difficulty to get in.
Nope. A review of the data indicates that it is now more difficult to be admitted.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The spike in appications over the past few years is unbelievable.
Applications, yes- number of students going to college? No. So the yield rates have also dropped, which make it about the same difficulty to get in.
Anonymous wrote:The spike in appications over the past few years is unbelievable.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Top 10% of the class to have a serious shot. Extended to top 15% if an unusual circumstance.
Students outside the top 20% don't bother applying
And yes, even if school systems say they don't rank, a hierarchy exsists
The numbers say 20-30%.
My dc just enrolled at UVA. The President Teresa sullivan said at convocation last evening that 90% of the class is in the top 10% of their high school class. Students come from 45 states and 100+ countries. The NoVa number of students is 100 less than it was for last year which is not a good trend for those applying from NoVa. Only two got in from his school and both enrolled.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Top 10% of the class to have a serious shot. Extended to top 15% if an unusual circumstance.
Students outside the top 20% don't bother applying
And yes, even if school systems say they don't rank, a hierarchy exsists
The numbers say 20-30%.
Anonymous wrote:The spike in appications over the past few years is unbelievable.
Anonymous wrote:So what we've learned is that approx 35% of each high school's applicants are admitted. Some HS's have a larger pool of applicants, but it's around 30-35% per school.