Not quibbling with your assertion that Syracuse is not a prestigious school but the lake caught fire? Granted I left Syracuse in the 90s but I googled that and couldn't find anything about it. You're sure you're not thinking about the Cuyahoga River in Cleveland (which I left in the 80s)? Although granted Onondaga Lake was pretty polluted when I was there.Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:NYU
Penn State
the all women's schools (e.g., Mt Holyoke, Smith, Bryn Mawr)
Tulane
Syracuse
Puh-leeze!
Tulane is a total party school, crap academics. Syracuse is famous only for the fact that its lake caught fire.
Penn state? Come on.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:NYU
Penn State
the all women's schools (e.g., Mt Holyoke, Smith, Bryn Mawr)
Tulane
Syracuse
Puh-leeze!
Tulane is a total party school, crap academics. Syracuse is famous only for the fact that its lake caught fire.
Penn state? Come on.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Attend a community college and transfer to UVA
UVA had guaranteed admissions with a sufficiently high community college GPA (something like a 3.9). This is certain a viable path for a kid who is not a strong test taker but gets good grades.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OF the Ivies, Cornell by far
Brown?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Attend a community college and transfer to UVA
UVA had guaranteed admissions with a sufficiently high community college GPA (something like a 3.9). This is certain a viable path for a kid who is not a strong test taker but gets good grades.
Anonymous wrote:Attend a community college and transfer to UVA
Anonymous wrote:OF the Ivies, Cornell by far
Anonymous wrote:NYU
Penn State
the all women's schools (e.g., Mt Holyoke, Smith, Bryn Mawr)
Tulane
Syracuse
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Brown. They'll let anyone in. No joke.
You've got to be kidding....
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
I think the trick to Columbia is do well at another school and then transfer in.
Columbia's transfer aceptance rate is less than 10%, not a whole lot better than the overall acceptance rate: http://undergrad.admissions.columbia.edu/ask/faq/topic/393
Columbia does have some formal partnerships with schools like Fordham and Occidental, where you can transfer in after a few years. I don't know what percent of applicants they take, though.
The ED rate at Columbia is a lot higher - something like 20%.
Anonymous wrote:Of the iviest, the "easiest" to get into are Cornell and Penn, which have recently tend to have acceptance around 12 or 13%. Still not easy to get into, but comparatively easier. I imagine part of it is the relatively large size of these schools. Penn is a little harder than Cornell.
The next tier would be Brown, Columbia, and Dartmouth. These tend to hover around 10%. I think these are all comparatively hard to get into, although in recent years Columbia has been a little harder, possibly because it's cool to live in New York (the past few years it has been ~7%). I don't get all this Brown bashing...it has an open curriculum, so I think it attracts more "artsy" types than the other schools (although there is still plenty of prep...just way less than Dartmouth), but it is still really difficult to get into.
The hardest ivies to get into are obviously Harvard, Yale, and Princeton which have acceptance rates that tend to hover around 5%.
Duke isn't an ivy, although it is a very good, very competitive school. It also is pretty preppy.