<p>I'm assuming that it's harder to get into SFS since it's a unique and highly-regarded program. Is that accurate? Do the four GU schools differ in selectivity? If the acceptance rate is 22% overall, does anyone know how that breaks out among the various schools?</p>
<p>EA the lowest was the college w/ 18.5%</p>
<p>I've heard that the SFS pool is self-selecting. So, even if the college or whatever other school has a lower acceptance rate, you'll be competing against kids with higher stats when you apply SFS. So yea, I believe that it's harder to get into SFS. Think about Penn's Wharton program vs. its College. School do differ in selectivity, but I wouldn't know how it breaks down.</p>
<p>You know, you can always transfer when you get in.</p>
<p>There used to be a more noticeable difference in the acceptance rates of the four schools, but over the past few years they've really converged to have acceptance rates that are pretty close. The SFS objectively has higher median SAT ranges and median class rank percentiles than the other schools, and I think it's a lot harder to differentiate yourself in the SFS pool. The College and MSB are about equally as hard to enter between the two, but the MSB stats are actually a little higher. NHS is hard to say because the applicant pool really increased this year, so we can't know what happened until they publish the statistics. </p>
<p>Honestly if you're applying go by what school fits your area of interest/passion.</p>
<p>Copley, any idea when they publish these stats?</p>
<p>Within the next few weeks. They're not publicly available, but my sister is an Alumni Interviewer, and they get all that info. </p>
<p>One is not really supposed to divulge the information, but I'll post the percentages when I get them.</p>
<p>Umm...the hoya publishes the stats by school. i'd say they're pretty public.</p>
<p>jp26 do you have a website/link?</p>
<p>They publish the acceptance rates, but not the other info.</p>