Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Don't see how you can argue Cornell being on the rise. But PP is right Vanderbilt,Brown, Emory, Columbia are the schools students talk about a lot.
Cornell, Vandy, Brown and Columbia are definitely hot. Don't know where all this Emory boosterism is coming from, though.
Apps for Cornell are down, y'all lie on here a lot. Emory and Notre Dame had the highest increase in early apps this year within the top 25. 20 and 13 percent increases. Emory doesn't need boosterism... Whatever that means.
That means little by itself. It's probably very selective.
The PP you’re replying to is not even right. Apps to Cornell are up. They’re lying out of their butt.
Anonymous wrote:Elite city schools like Columbia and Penn have been on an upward trajectory for a while, and I'd put Northwestern and JHU in that category as well, even though JHU's rise in popularity was more recent owing its role in the COVID-19 crisis. One of the PPs was right in pointing out that the UChicago hype sort of hit a plateau and the recent string of murders and surge in crime in Chicago definitely don't look good on the school's reputation as a whole.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Elon is trash
How so?
NP. Literally every single child I know from this area that chooses Elon is learning disabled in some way. Not severely, but ADHD and others that prevented admission into other schools. I think it's great as an option for those kids, and it's quite possible one of mine may attend there, but it is not a strong academic school, at all. I am very close to two graduates and their and their classmates outcomes and options upon graduation were so limited, that it really makes me question the value of the school. It really lacks diversity and is full of underwhelming students of wealthy parents. They decline many many students who they know will not likely attend because they applied as a safety, in order to try to maintain a sub-80% acceptance rate. That in and of itself is a real turnoff. The up and coming schools that aren't gaming the system that way: Indiana and Pitt.
You have no idea what you are talking about.
NP. Actually, there's some truth there, plus a 70% acceptance rate.
The “NP.” You put at the beginning of each of your posts just let’s everyone know you’re sock puppeting.
Anonymous wrote:Elite city schools like Columbia and Penn have been on an upward trajectory for a while, and I'd put Northwestern and JHU in that category as well, even though JHU's rise in popularity was more recent owing its role in the COVID-19 crisis. One of the PPs was right in pointing out that the UChicago hype sort of hit a plateau and the recent string of murders and surge in crime in Chicago definitely don't look good on the school's reputation as a whole.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Elon is trash
How so?
NP. Literally every single child I know from this area that chooses Elon is learning disabled in some way. Not severely, but ADHD and others that prevented admission into other schools. I think it's great as an option for those kids, and it's quite possible one of mine may attend there, but it is not a strong academic school, at all. I am very close to two graduates and their and their classmates outcomes and options upon graduation were so limited, that it really makes me question the value of the school. It really lacks diversity and is full of underwhelming students of wealthy parents. They decline many many students who they know will not likely attend because they applied as a safety, in order to try to maintain a sub-80% acceptance rate. That in and of itself is a real turnoff. The up and coming schools that aren't gaming the system that way: Indiana and Pitt.
Total troll post. Most of the top privates in the dc area send one or two to Elon each year and not a single one that I know that has gone there has a learning disability. It’s a great school and the students there are quite happy. If you don’t like it, that’s fine, but that’s no reason to make up nonsense like this post.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Elon is trash
How so?
NP. Literally every single child I know from this area that chooses Elon is learning disabled in some way. Not severely, but ADHD and others that prevented admission into other schools. I think it's great as an option for those kids, and it's quite possible one of mine may attend there, but it is not a strong academic school, at all. I am very close to two graduates and their and their classmates outcomes and options upon graduation were so limited, that it really makes me question the value of the school. It really lacks diversity and is full of underwhelming students of wealthy parents. They decline many many students who they know will not likely attend because they applied as a safety, in order to try to maintain a sub-80% acceptance rate. That in and of itself is a real turnoff. The up and coming schools that aren't gaming the system that way: Indiana and Pitt.
You have no idea what you are talking about.
NP. Actually, there's some truth there, plus a 70% acceptance rate.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Elon is trash
How so?
NP. Literally every single child I know from this area that chooses Elon is learning disabled in some way. Not severely, but ADHD and others that prevented admission into other schools. I think it's great as an option for those kids, and it's quite possible one of mine may attend there, but it is not a strong academic school, at all. I am very close to two graduates and their and their classmates outcomes and options upon graduation were so limited, that it really makes me question the value of the school. It really lacks diversity and is full of underwhelming students of wealthy parents. They decline many many students who they know will not likely attend because they applied as a safety, in order to try to maintain a sub-80% acceptance rate. That in and of itself is a real turnoff. The up and coming schools that aren't gaming the system that way: Indiana and Pitt.
Anonymous wrote:
Resorting to that?!, you lost.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Don't see how you can argue Cornell being on the rise. But PP is right Vanderbilt,Brown, Emory, Columbia are the schools students talk about a lot.
Cornell, Vandy, Brown and Columbia are definitely hot. Don't know where all this Emory boosterism is coming from, though.
Apps for Cornell are down, y'all lie on here a lot. Emory and Notre Dame had the highest increase in early apps this year within the top 25. 20 and 13 percent increases. Emory doesn't need boosterism... Whatever that means.
That means little by itself. It's probably very selective.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Don't see how you can argue Cornell being on the rise. But PP is right Vanderbilt,Brown, Emory, Columbia are the schools students talk about a lot.
Cornell, Vandy, Brown and Columbia are definitely hot. Don't know where all this Emory boosterism is coming from, though.
Apps for Cornell are down, y'all lie on here a lot. Emory and Notre Dame had the highest increase in early apps this year within the top 25. 20 and 13 percent increases. Emory doesn't need boosterism... Whatever that means.