<p>does anyone know the difference?</p>
<p>never seen this published.</p>
<p>It is obviously going to be much lower considering only 3% of enrolled student come from OOS. </p>
<p>Obviously the accepted percentage will be a little higher.</p>
<p>not necessarily. University ofCalifornia Santa Barbara’s OOS enrollment is only 4%. Yet the acceptance rate for OOS was 47%, only 2-3% less than instate.</p>
<p>Florida is not comparable to UC; there are too many different variables, especially considering Santa Barbara isn’t the flagship of California, whereas UF is.</p>
<p>Florida is analogous to UNC-CH in which the state legislature mandates only a small portion can be accepted from OOS. Thus, admission will be more competitive.</p>
<p>that is depending on the numbers though. you cant say its more because we dont know how many oos apply. it could be just as, or nominally more so. or it could be twice as hard.</p>
<p>exactly. It’s definitely true that Florida has to take most of their students from, well, Florida, but if only a small number apply OOS (which is often the case for public schools) then the acceptance rate wouldn’t be any lower.</p>