Most popular elite colleges by state

<p>OK, just a tease. Most popular US News top 25 universities/LACs in Northeast states: </p>

<p>New England:
Connecticut: Yale, Brown, Cornell
Maine: Colby, Bowdoin, Bates
Massachusetts: Brown, Harvard, Cornell
New Hampshire: Dartmouth, Brown, Cornell
Rhode Island: Brown, Harvard, Cornell
Vermont: Dartmouth, Middlebury, Cornell</p>

<p>Mid-Atlantic:
District of Columbia: UVA, Georgetown, Brown
Maryland: John Hopkins, UVA, Georgetown
New Jersey: Cornell, Princeton, Penn
New York: Cornell, Columbia, Brown
Pennsylvania: Penn, Carnegie Mellon, Cornell
Virginia: UVA, Duke, Georgetown</p>

<p>The original list has so much fail, why are most of the unis listed as being in multiple states??</p>

<p>OK seriously, do they not teach reading comprehension anymore or something?</p>

<p>Well not surprised BU, NYU & Cornell dominates popularity in my state. Look at the number of total students at those schools. You can’t expect schools like Julliard, Amherst, or or Cooper Union to be the most popular. So these statistics are kind of pointless.</p>

<p>

</p>

<p>Well, you can slice and dice the data any way you like. Many of the big schools are in the US News #25 to #50 range. You could look only at the top 25 schools, or just the top 25 privates. I’ll post those shortly.</p>

<p>There is a definite elitist skew by just looking at the top US News colleges. It’s interesting to see which of these colleges are more popular where, but most (maybe vast majority of) scores do not go to elite colleges.</p>

<p>

</p>

<p>And they apply to BU (yield = 18%) as their safety.</p>

<p>

</p>

<p>Well, that’s certainly true. In almost every state the top score recipient is the state flagship, often by a wide margin. Public higher education serves far more people than private colleges/universities, and elite privates serve even a tinier handful. That’s true even in the Northeast, e.g.,</p>

<p>State: Most popular public / most popular private / most popular top 25 private</p>

<p>Connecticut: UConn (11,490) / Quinnipiac (2,639) / Yale (1,444)
Massachusetts: UMass Amherst (17,430) / Northeastern (9,269) / Brown (2,793)
New Jersey: Rutgers (29,246) / Drexel (6,307) / Cornell (3,699)
New York: SUNY Binghamton (18.892) / NYU (10,682) / Cornell (9,618)
Pennsylvania: Penn State (33,678) / Drexel (8,965) / Penn (3,894)
Maryland: U Maryland College Park (14,933) / Johns Hopkins (2,839) / Johns Hopkins</p>

<p>And keep in mind that Cornell is a sort of hybrid; parts (Arts & Sciences, Engineering) are purely private while the 6 state-supported “contract colleges” are in effect part of the state university system, albeit privately managed by Cornell.</p>

<p>In much of the rest of the country it’s even more lopsided in favor of public higher education.</p>

<p>OK, this thread is getting quite a few views, the other one fewer, so I’m going to re-post here a refinement of the data focusing on US News top 25 LACS and universities:</p>

<p>Most popular super-elite (US News top 25) colleges/universities by state</p>

<p>Here I’ve confined the search to US News top 25 universities and US News top 25 LACs, listing the top 4 in rank order of popularity among students in a given state, based again on the # of students sending one or more SAT score reports (SAT I and/or SAT II) to the colleges/universities in question. Where a top 25 public university appears on the list, I’ve also listed the top 4 most popular private colleges/universities among students in that state. Finally, I’ve listed the total number of students in the state sending SAT score reports to the most popular top 25 college/university and, as a comparative benchmark, the number of students sending SAT score reports to Harvard, the one school that appears among the top 45 most popular in almost every state. (In a few states Harvard is not among the top 45, consequently Harvard data are not available; those I’ve listed as “Harvard n/a but < X” where X represents the number of students sending SAT scores to the 45th-most popular school, a figure that represents an upper bound on the # sending SAT scores to Harvard but possibly well in excess of the actual number)</p>

<p>Observations: Even at the super-elite level, localism/regionalism triumphs. The Ivies are far more popular in the Northeast than in the rest of the country, but generally New Englanders prefer New England Ivies and Mid-Atlantic residents prefer Mid-Atlantic Ivies. Harvard has a following almost everywhere but usually is less popular than some other top 25 school closer to home. Stanford dominates the West but also does well in the Midwest; less so in the northeast and South. Northwestern leads the Midwest but by a narrower margin over Harvard and Stanford, with the rest of the Ivies generally lagging. Duke and Vanderbilt dominate the South but are pretty much no-shows elsewhere. Wash U garners more attention in the South than in the Midwest and perhaps should be considered a Southern rather than a Midwestern school (but Missouri has always been in that awkward in-between space). Bottom line, contrary to what a lot of people on CC seem to think, even at the super-elite level the appeal of most schools is strongly local and/or regional—with the singular exception of Harvard.</p>

<p>Midwest
Illinois: Northwestern (1,860), U Chicago, Harvard (971), Stanford
Indiana: Notre Dame (558), Northwestern, U Chicago, Harvard n/a but <227
Iowa: Stanford (128), Northwestern, Wash U, Harvard (91)
Michigan: Northwestern (668), Harvard (639), Stanford, Yale
Minnesota: Northwestern (480), Stanford, Harvard (347), Carleton
Missouri: Wash U (486), Harvard (233), Stanford, Yale
Ohio: Northwestern (1,121), Cornell, Notre Dame, Harvard (781)
Wisconsin: Northwestern (421), Harvard (297), Yale, Stanford</p>

<p>Mid-Atlantic
Delaware: Penn (191), UVA, Johns Hopkins, Cornell, Princeton, Harvard n/a but < 109
District of Columbia: UVA (275), Georgetown (270), Brown , Penn, Princeton, Harvard (154)
Maryland: Johns Hopkins (2,939), UVA, Georgetown, Cornell, Penn, Harvard (985)
New Jersey: Cornell (3,699), Princeton, Penn, Columbia, Harvard n/a but < 1,966
New York: Cornell (9,618), Columbia, Brown, Harvard n/a but < 3,037
Pennsylvania: Penn (3,894), Carnegie Mellon, Cornell, Princeton, Harvard n/a but < 1,492
Virginia: UVA (12,169), Duke (1,482), Georgetown, Princeton, Cornell, Harvard (1,007)</p>

<p>New England
Connecticut: Yale (1,444), Brown, Cornell, Dartmouth, Harvard (774)
Maine: Colby (609), Bowdoin, Bates, Dartmouth, Harvard (235)
Massachusetts: Brown (2,793), Harvard (2,565), Cornell, Dartmouth
New Hampshire: Dartmouth (650), Brown, Cornell, Harvard (362)
Rhode Island: Brown (745), Harvard (193), Cornell, Dartmouth
Vermont: Dartmouth (276), Middlebury , Cornell, Brown, Harvard (117)</p>

<p>Southeast
Alabama: Vanderbilt (424), Duke, Emory, Harvard (171)
Florida: Duke (2,233), Harvard (1,940), Emory, Cornell
Georgia: Emory (4,632), Vanderbilt, Duke, Harvard n/a but < 985
Kentucky: Vanderbilt (322), Wash U, Harvard (156), Northwestern
North Carolina: Duke (4,205), Davidson, UVA, Harvard (716)
South Carolina: Duke (945), Vanderbilt, Harvard n/a but < 341
Tennessee: Vanderbilt (1,157), Wash U, Duke, Emory, UVA, Harvard (258)</p>

<p>South Central
Arkansas: Vanderbilt (121), Wash U, Harvard (92), Yale
Louisiana: Rice (161), Vanderbilt, Harvard (139), Wash U
Mississippi: Vanderbilt (103), Harvard (82), Emory, Princeton
Oklahoma: Harvard (153), Wash U (123), Stanford, Yale
Texas: Rice (9,225), Stanford, Harvard (2,503)</p>

<p>West
Alaska: Stanford (104), Harvard (77), Yale, Dartmouth
Arizona: Stanford (1,008), UCLA, UC Berkeley, Harvard (476), Yale Princeton
Colorado: Stanford (683), Colorado College, UC Berkeley, Cornell, Harvard (305), Northwestern
California: UCLA (54,242), UC Berkeley (43,903), Stanford (17,836), Harvard (5,767), Yale, Cornell
Hawaii: UCLA (453), Stanford (386), UC Berkeley, Harvard (156)
Oregon: Stanford (871), UC Berkeley, UCLA, Harvard (286), Yale, Cornell
Washington: Stanford (1,732), UC Berkeley, UCLA, Harvard (623), Yale, Brown</p>

<p>Why are Kansas and Nebraska missing from the OP? Thats leaving out 4% of the US right there!</p>

<p>

</p>

<p>Because I just didn’t have time to do all the states so I omitted a bunch of relatively low-population states including KS, NE, SD, ND, MT, WY, ID, UT, NV, NM, and WV. You’re welcome to look them up yourself. Or maybe I’ll have time to add them later. I figure I got states with probably 90+% of the population and (my guess) probably a larger share than that of applicants to top colleges and universities as kids in many of these states tend to stay close to home. Can’t please everyone doing this in my limited spare time. No offense intended.</p>