<p>I was wondering if anyone had any stats on cornell undergrads getting into the top 10 business, medical, law, etc... schools</p>
<p>they are listed #25 on feeder to top schools, the rankings are posted in on of the recent threads</p>
<p>..yeah but that wsj report was fraught with inadequcies
1. it only considered the number 1 school for each sector(i.e. business), not the top 10, which is a bit more informative.</p>
<p>come on! (i know it sounds like i am pestering, but i would really like to know, and dont give the wsj (interviewed 5,000 people report) report, it was a horrible survey!)</p>
<p>alright i think i found a thread from 2004, but i hope it is still relevant. Heres the link to it, i dont know if im allowed to do this but here it is:
<a href="http://talk.collegeconfidential.com/showthread.php?t=2487%5B/url%5D">http://talk.collegeconfidential.com/showthread.php?t=2487</a></p>
<p>P.S. apparently cornell is top 4 in this list, dont know if its still holds true</p>
<p>I would say it's difficult to call any college a feeder school to the top graduate programs because colleges are different from high schools. Many college graduates don't choose to attend grad school, making it difficult to identify any colleges as feeder schools. That being said I would say that yes of course Cornell is in the top tier as far as admits to the top grad programs. Also, Cornell itself houses many top notch grad programs (in medicine, law, engineering, literary theory, business). Going to Cornell certainly doesn't hurt admission to those programs. Cornell is one of the top schools in the country, of course it places its students well in the top grad programs.</p>
<p>thanks (ten chrs)</p>
<p>The WSJ feeder schools ranking took into consideration the top 5 schools in business, medicine and law (not top 1).</p>