<p>i'm thinking 55 applies to the whole arch class. Because Cornell introduced a new Graduate architecture program, they decreased the number of freshman students so they can fit more graduate students into their new program. Rand Hall can only fit a limited number of students after all.</p>
<p>Wow thats tiny. ILR was also small - around 151 ... but thats still 100 more. lol whoever got into arch. should feel really special!!</p>
<p>Figgy my friend got into arch. lol.</p>
<p>lol you seem to know a lot of people who got into Cornell</p>
<p>LMAO! it's the same person!</p>
<p>ooo, so now they're your friend lol :P</p>
<p>Always my friend! What I can't be jealous lol?</p>
<p>haha I guess thats true..</p>
<p>i think that it's hard if ur a guy but on their website, about half of the girls who applied to their engineering school got in</p>
<p>Engineering acceptance rates:
Male: 33.6%
Female: 53.8%
Overall: 38.1%
<a href="http://www.dpb.cornell.edu/documents/1000147.pdf%5B/url%5D">http://www.dpb.cornell.edu/documents/1000147.pdf</a></p>
<p>Does anyone have any idea what the acceptance rate for ILR transfers are, factoring guaranteed transfers out? I know including guaranteed transfers, the acceptance rate is around 35%, I believe.</p>
<p>OK if you find out the number of people all together it helps a lot. My letter said that there are 40-50 people each year who use their gt. As admissions get harder each year you can probably go a little higher on that range. GL and post if you find the number!</p>
<p>Thanks Figgy! those numbers help a lot (thats pretty much the range I expected). I actually do have the numbers for the ILR transfers from 2005: 152 total applied (96 male, 56 female), 98 were accepted (64 male, 34 female), and 78 entered (51 male, 27 female)</p>
<p>Hmmm ya so I'd say take the 40-50 out of the 78 (since those are the only concrete numbers we can use). What school do you plan on applying from?</p>
<p>I would be applying for junior status from SUNY Binghamton. I've posted my stats under a different thread (they shouldnt be too hard to find cause im a new member). any advice would be great</p>
<p>"Cornell More Selective Than Ever</p>
<p>A record number of high school students applied to Cornell this year and a record number were turned away. Undergraduate applications reached an all-time high, with 28,097 aspiring freshmen vying for a spot on the Hill this fall -- a 15% increase over last year. The tidal wave of applications produced another record: the University admitted only 24.7 percent of the students who applied, its lowest admit rate ever."</p>
<p>from Cornell Alumni Magazine (May/June 2006)</p>
<p>Umm... just wondering, but would there be a way to find out what the admit rate for early decision applicants to the college of engineering was?</p>
<p>yeah, id love to see a number for that too. But then again id love to see a number for white guys living in new york for cornell engeer early decision with a 3.8 GPA a 2150 on the sat (740 math) and an 800 on physics......but hey not gonna happen. Unless some1 outthere has such crazy statistics.... you dont... do you?</p>
<p>"Umm... just wondering, but would there be a way to find out what the admit rate for early decision applicants to the college of engineering was?"</p>
<p>I third that request.
At the very least, I wouldn't even mind knowing just how many applicants there were ED to CoE. I could estimate/calculate from there.
Do you think emailing admissions would be alright for this?</p>
<p>i am an international student with 2 A's in A-levels physics and a B in chemistry. but we have to sit for 4 A-levels subject in our school. mine further mathematics results were cancelled by the Cambridge because of suspected malpractice(i had helped a friend of mine). i have been getting A's in the internal examinations. but because of our ranking system considers 4 A levels result, my rank has gone down to 51 in a pool of 91 students. and that will be included in my transcript as well. are there any colleges that does not consider rank in selection process and gives need based aid as well. i think i'm in a great trouble right now. is oberlin a good choice for students like me in the early decison.</p>