2006 Transfer Rates

<p>Sorry for the late response, but the admissions office says it would be a transfer application since I enrolled in another university. I would still be competing with the other applicants from other schools. Anyone have some insight on this? Also, is it common that competition will be higher for the 1st semester vs. 2nd semester? Is GPA from both schools weighed equally?</p>

<p>hey thanx a lot brand_182....there shud be more people like u in collegeconfi...coll. wud be easier to get into..haha...anyways...wud u know which coll. give gud fin aid..to transfer students...</p>

<p>does anyone know the deal with connecticut college?</p>

<p>Is this really Hamilton's acceptance rate? If so... jeeze.</p>

<p>I'm predicting Chicago's to drop under 20% this year</p>

<p>Why is that nidd?</p>

<p>Thanks for this thread! It's great. Does anyone have the stats on Sarah Lawrence?</p>

<p>"Why is that nidd?"</p>

<p>Chicago's popularity is skyrocketing. EA applications are up 42% from last year, which most likely will impact the number of transfers they will accept.</p>

<p>Does anyone have last years %'s? From personal research I think they're a lot lower.</p>

<p>wow brandeis' tranfer rate is higher than their freshman acceptance rate by a pretty significant amt... i wonder why that is o.o</p>

<p>It seems that some schools much prefer students who transfer from 4-year colleges as opposed to community colleges, yet others (like the UCs) take most kids from community colleges. Any idea why? I know the UCs have agreements with local community colleges, but does anyone know of specific schools that look more favorably upon transfers from 4-year colleges?</p>

<p>The UC's are Public, and are REQUIRED by Calif law to take transfers from Calif CC's. That is the way the UC/ Calif CC system was setup in the 60's. Private 4 year colleges can accept transfer students from where they choose to.</p>

<p>Oh, that makes sense. But what difference would it make to private colleges to favor incoming sophomores from a 4-year university vs. a community college? That's what I'm trying to get at.</p>

<p>Admission offices can have a better idea of how academically prepared a transfer student coming from another 4 year college is than for someone coming from a CC. 4 year colleges post the admissions stats for incoming students on the Common Data sets, so it is easier to compare the level of preparation of admitted students at 4 year colleges. So maybe students transfering in from other 4 yr colleges are more of a "know factor"?</p>

<p>i go to cornell and im seeking to transfer out because i hate ithaca. however, i can tell you that cornell has a business program in every single school except for architecture art and planning.
hotel: corporate finance
engineering: operations research, you could concentrate in financial engineering
arts and sciences: econ
cals: applied econ and management (THE business program)
human ecology: policy analysis and management
ILR: the whole school is business, basically. </p>

<p>i hope that helps!! =)</p>

<p>Does anyone know the break down for acceptance rates between Wharton and the College at UPENN?</p>

<p>I'm confused why is Cornell's transfer rate so high and BCs not nearly as high when BC is far easier to get into as a high school student than Cornell?</p>

<p>What are the transfer rates at the top business schools?</p>

<p>so, these rates are for students who entered their new schools this fall? meaning, they transferred during the 06/07 academic year?</p>

<p>This thread was started 4/07, before most transfer results for the fall of 2007 were released. So, the rates posted by the OP were for students who applied in the 2005/6 school year and began attending their transfer schools in the fall of 2006.</p>