<p>[Post-graduation</a> data -*Office of the Dean of the College](<a href=“http://www.princeton.edu/odoc/faculty/grading/postdegree/]Post-graduation ”>http://www.princeton.edu/odoc/faculty/grading/postdegree/ )</p>
<p>Scroll down to see medical school admissions statistics. It has been around 90 percent for the past 7+ years. I know that looking at percentages is stupid for most schools, because the fudge the numbers, but I doubt a school of Princeton’s caliber messes with the numbers like that.</p>
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It is important to note that Princeton undergraduates continue to have a very good record in winning admission to the most selective medical schools in the United States. The number of Princeton students applying to Top 10 medical schools is just as strong as it ever was (in 2005, for example, there were 410 applications submitted to Top 10 schools; since then, the number of applications has ranged between 373 and 443). In 2008 and 2009, Princeton students who applied to a Top 10 medical school were offered admission at a rate more than three times the overall admit rates at those schools. Moreover, both before and after the institution of the grading policy, between one-quarter and one-third of the Princetonians going to medical school in any given year have elected to enroll at one of the Top 10 schools. Put simply, the number of Princeton students attending Top 10 medical schools has not changed since the institution of the grading policy.
^^ Straight from their link. Impressive stuff P!</p>