<p>5/300 to my knowledge from my school applied to Cornell… 2 so far have been rejected.</p>
<p>Also, if students apply to different colleges at Cornell, their applications won’t even be seen together. (except for FA)</p>
<p>5/300 to my knowledge from my school applied to Cornell… 2 so far have been rejected.</p>
<p>Also, if students apply to different colleges at Cornell, their applications won’t even be seen together. (except for FA)</p>
<p>I go to a fairly solid public school in Texas, and whenever we have a strong class we have around 2-3 Cornell acceptances. A poor class and we have zero, but, like I said…public high school in Texas. ;)</p>
<p>Definitely. My school has more than 700 seniors and I believe more than 30 got in ED already…though that probably means it will be harder to get in for students applying to Cornell in my school as regular decision candidates.</p>
<p>Turns out I was completely wrong about how many people applied to Cornell from my school. Two others got likelies over the weekend, bringing the total to 4 applied, 3 admitted in a senior class of about 150</p>
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Yes. Both me and my friend Whitney were accepted.</p>
<p>I doubt they really set caps on number of students per school. Usually, about 15 out of maybe 300 from my school would apply, about 10 would get in, and about 5 would actually enroll. And then another few kids would eventually transfer over through GT.</p>
<p>Two freshmen at Cornell in the class of 2012 from our Ohio public H.S.</p>
<p>I graduated with ~330, 8 kids ended up going and many more got in. I’d say at least 15 altogether.</p>