<p>I thought that was the admitted stat.</p>
<p>It's probably around the same thing. They don't actually have the information on that.</p>
<p>So the acutal attening Freshman stats could be lower? I have always been confused about this. I know a lot of people from my school who apply to UC's for safeties, but their matches are Ivy schools. To me, I think that would bump up the admitted stats, but no one has ever confirmed that to me. :P</p>
<p>Perhaps. Do you know the percentage of students admitted that attend?</p>
<p>What is your second choice? UCLA??</p>
<p>1st- UCSD
2nd- UCB
3rd- UCLA
4th- UCD</p>
<p>Besides raw GPA, difficulty of courses is taken into account.</p>
<p>DRab, how would they tell about the difficulty? Just by AP/Honor status?</p>
<p>i think also the difficulty of the school. the admissions know if you are from a competitive HS</p>
<p>Yes, probably by course status (honors, AP, college), as in how advanced the course is (if it's at a college, a fourth level calculus class will probably be looked upon as more impressive as an introductory course in the subject (which would also look great)), and by high school difficulty.</p>
<p>OH thanks. That makes me feel better since our school made it to the front page of the Wall Street Journal. XP</p>
<p>Is my chances worse if I apply for Undeclared: Engineering?</p>
<p>Yes, probably.</p>
<p>So what should I put for intended major?</p>
<p>It's complicated- what do you want to study? Many threads go into this area, about intended major. If you put some sort of engineering, more likely that you won't get in (than if you were to put something in L and S.) Another consideration is that if you put L and S, probably increasing your chances to be admitted, you likely will be unable to major in engineering. If you want to study engineering, you should probably apply as an intended engineering major, but realize that you might have less of a chance of getting in by doing that instead of applying to L and S.</p>
<p>Yeah, I put undecided L&S.</p>