<p>So, I want to apply yo UPenn and I have to decide which school to choose. I like both of them EQUALLY. If I'm a girl ,which one would be easier for me to get? SEAS, right? (since there are a lot of females in Nursing)...</p>
<p>they’re rather different curriculum choices</p>
<p>what would you want to study in seas, anyway? bioengineering?</p>
<p>you won’t be getting hands-on clinicals in engineering classes - and you won’t have circuit-building in nursing labs</p>
<p>I dont know what i want to study yet…but i like both schools.
And is it hard to get in nursing, as a girl?</p>
<p>well, 20% of applicants were accepted
([Nursing</a> School admits 20 percent for 2014 | The Daily Pennsylvanian](<a href=“http://www.thedp.com/article/nursing-school-admits-20-percent-2014]Nursing”>http://www.thedp.com/article/nursing-school-admits-20-percent-2014))</p>
<p>most applicants are girls</p>
<p>there you go</p>
<p>^ oh thanks.
but what us the acceptance rate for SEAS?</p>
<p>Apply to the school where you will fit. Do not apply to nursing because you think it is easier to get in, because nursing and engineering are pretty different fields.</p>
<p>Oh my god. SEAS and Nursing are soooo incredibly different. Come visit Penn and see why. The SEAS and Nursing curricula are pretty rigid so you’re going to absolutely hate your entire college education unless you make the right choice now. It sounds like the College is right for you. And don’t apply to the easiest school to get into because you’ll hate 25% of your college experience!</p>
<p>don’t focus on “oh i’m a girl so its harder to get into nursing and easier to get into seas”. most of the applicants to nursing are girls and most of the accepted are girls. its pretty proportional to the amount of girls/boys applied.</p>