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1:1200 is probably worse than most selective universities.

I know it is not apples to apples comparison but it’s the first thing that came to my mind.




It's a lot easier to kick someone out of school if they stop paying than it is to kick someone out of an apartment.


> 1:1200 is probably worse than most selective universities

By two orders of magnitude.

Ivies range from about 1:20 to 1:10 in non-covid times.


It's sort of a meaningless comparison though. A huge amount of self-selection goes on before an application to an elite university is even filled out.


And a ton more work to file a college application and a smaller group of applicants. Zillow apartment applications is just clicking an "I'm interested" button.


> A huge amount of self-selection goes on before an application to an elite university is even filled out

Probably a lot less self-selecting out than you think.


I must say the list is a little bit surprising to me. https://www.usnews.com/best-colleges/rankings/lowest-accepta...

I guess I would have expected a few top Ivies to have significantly lower acceptance rates on the grounds that one could imagine a lot of average-ish students putting one of those schools down just in case they hit the lottery.

But actually, the top Ivies, MIT, West Point, top music schools, and a couple of schools I've never even heard of (!) are all in the 5 to 10% admissions range.


> I guess I would have expected a few top Ivies to have significantly lower acceptance rates on the grounds that one could imagine a lot of average-ish students putting one of those schools down just in case they hit the lottery.

There are many, many of these applicants who have roughly a 0% chance of admission.

I am not saying that elite schools are easy to get in (they are not), but someone who is a strong all-around applicant will most likely get into at least one elite school.

Most applicants are challenged by the fact that they only have one or two strong points (like grades and scores), and those “strong points” often aren’t even that strong. Athletics, community involvement, leadership, above-and-beyond academics, etc. go a long way.




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