captiv8ed Posted March 4, 2010 Posted March 4, 2010 Would anyone like to try to start figuring out percentages and if this was a more difficult year? Oregon got 135 applications for 8 spots. Does that mean they only made 8 offers? If so, that is a 6% acceptance rate for a school that ranks 57 in USNWR. Does anyone have numbers from other schools?
carolina45 Posted March 4, 2010 Posted March 4, 2010 Would anyone like to try to start figuring out percentages and if this was a more difficult year? Oregon got 135 applications for 8 spots. Does that mean they only made 8 offers? If so, that is a 6% acceptance rate for a school that ranks 57 in USNWR. Does anyone have numbers from other schools? I'm not positive, but I would asasume '8 spots' means they have room for 8 students to matriculate. In that case they would accept several more than 8.
whocanitbenow Posted March 4, 2010 Posted March 4, 2010 I'm not positive, but I would asasume '8 spots' means they have room for 8 students to matriculate. In that case they would accept several more than 8. Informally, I heard that Northwestern applications were up (roughly ~300 this year), but they seemed to have offered about 20 people. That's more than I was thinking, having heard that funding was down this year and they were anticipating a smaller cohort, but still fewer than what their website says they typically admit. I get the 20 person admit number from the open house email that didn't BCC the names (poor move, but insightful).
ilikemoney Posted March 4, 2010 Posted March 4, 2010 From what I've been told, Johns Hopkins gets a bit over 100, and accept 7 or 8 to try to net around 4. So I guess that would mean it's somewhere between 5-8% acceptance rate.
myrrh Posted March 4, 2010 Posted March 4, 2010 I'm not positive, but I would asasume '8 spots' means they have room for 8 students to matriculate. In that case they would accept several more than 8. I think they SHOULD accept more than 8 applicants. Even when it comes to some best-ranked schools, there could be about 50% admitted student who decide not to attend. Accepting only 8 students means a school could have perhaps 4 who really attend. You have space and funding for 8 and only get 4, it's not a very good thing.
jacib Posted March 4, 2010 Posted March 4, 2010 I think they SHOULD accept more than 8 applicants. Even when it comes to some best-ranked schools, there could be about 50% admitted student who decide not to attend. Accepting only 8 students means a school could have perhaps 4 who really attend. You have space and funding for 8 and only get 4, it's not a very good thing. I got a sense of the breakdown of Columbia's numbers: 300ish applications, there were officially about 8-10 slots, but they had a particularly small cohort last year (7, I think), and usually when a school has a small cohort one year, it can bump up the next year's cohort. I think last year they accepted about 12, this year they accepted 16, and a few of us admitted students were calculating rates and unofficially thought there would probably be 10-13 in the actual entering cohort next year. I get the sense that this situation is unusual though, and that yielding about 7/12 was unusually low, and that if they yield 13/16 it will be on the high side (though I think it would still make the university happy to get that many students). That's just the sense I got from the faculty at the reception/the grad students at the bar afterwards.
jacib Posted March 4, 2010 Posted March 4, 2010 I got a sense of the breakdown of Columbia's numbers: 300ish applications, there were officially about 8-10 slots, but they had a particularly small cohort last year (7, I think), and usually when a school has a small cohort one year, it can bump up the next year's cohort. I think last year they accepted about 12, this year they accepted 16, and a few of us admitted students were calculating rates and unofficially thought there would probably be 10-13 in the actual entering cohort next year. I get the sense that this situation is unusual though, and that yielding about 7/12 was unusually low, and that if they yield 13/16 it will be on the high side (though I think it would still make the university happy to get that many students). That's just the sense I got from the faculty at the reception/the grad students at the bar afterwards. That said, my father works at a smaller program that only admits two or three students, but its such a self selecting group who wants to be in that small of a program, they often enough yield all two or three students, so this year they aren't accepting more than 2, though I think they have a short wait list.
focused Posted March 4, 2010 Posted March 4, 2010 These figures are directly from the respective programs listed below: Stanford - about 240 applicants for a cohort of 9-10 (they didn't indicate how many they accepted, but I'm guessing around 14-15), for an acceptance rate of approximately 5-6% depending on exactly how many were accepted. Harvard - 268 applicants, actually accepted 11 (indicated this is in anticipation of a cohort of 8-9), for an acceptance rate of 4% UMichigan, Ann Arbor - accepted 8% (I don't know the # of applicants - a prof on the admissions committee just noted this percentage in a personal e-mail)
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