<p>I don’t have any statistics - that’s right.</p>
<p>Yet I just can’t imagine it being any other way.</p>
<p>One point to take into consideration is obviously that for every IB program there are innumerable schools with regular, national school programs. In my country there is probably one IB student for every 1000th regular student. (This is basically calculated guesswork as I roughly know the amount of IB programmes in the country and the amount of high schools.)</p>
<p>So when you look at how many IB students are accepted compared to how many students from nationalized programs, and compare that to the amount of people studying in the respective programs - then you’ll actually see what I meant. But I do see that I didn’t actually make myself clear when I said that there are more students from schools accustomed to sending students to the US and IB programmes. </p>
<p>Am I making any sense at all, lol? Feels like I lost track myself…</p>