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<p>Sorry but when I went to White Bear Lake, I didn’t get the impression that it is rich…</p>
<p>Anyway, at my school, I think 90%+ go to 2- or 4-year college.</p>
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<p>Sorry but when I went to White Bear Lake, I didn’t get the impression that it is rich…</p>
<p>Anyway, at my school, I think 90%+ go to 2- or 4-year college.</p>
<p>100%</p>
<p>Everyone has to take college courses to graduate. Therefore, everyone goes to college.</p>
<p>don’t really know but it’s in the middle</p>
<p>college bound: 98.6%
4 year colleges: 94.6%
2 year colleges: 4.0%
work/military/other: 1.4%</p>
<p>around 99 percent go to college,
maybe 1-2 percent go to a CC.
Around 10 percent go to Ivies and the equivalent, and maybe 20% go to well-regarded schools.
then around 30% go to SUNY Buffalo</p>
<p>Idk about exact statistics, so I’ll guess</p>
<p>Go on to any type of college: 90%
Community college: 25%
Crappy 4 year college: 60%
Decent 4 year college: 5%</p>
<p>Graduate: 75%
Of those
~70% go to community college
~20% go to 4 Years
~10% Workforce/Military/Gang</p>
<p>90%
bump bump</p>
<p>Our school profile says 97%</p>
<p>According to my hs’s profile, but sort of rounded so it won’t add up to 100%:</p>
<p>Community College - about 60%
Four-Year College - about 30%
Vocational or Trade School - 10%
Military - 2%
Other - 2%</p>
<p>I think it’s about 99-97% who go to a 4 year college. The only people I know from c/o 2008 who didn’t go to college joined the army and the local ballet corps. 95% graduate. This year I think we’re top 50 by US news, but we’re always top 100.</p>
<p>At my school, it’s 100 percent to 4 year colleges. I go to a pretty small private school (30~35 kids in a class), so I guess that’s why. Occasionally, there’s someone who takes a gap year, but they still end up in college after that. (that counts, right?)</p>
<p>Maybe 50-60% at best.
No one goes elite…ever.</p>
<p>70% of the student body (66 students in the senior class) goes on to a two-year school. However that number has been as high as 85% in the past five years. The other, say 25%, usually go on to a relatively low-ranked schools (e.g. Albright, Kutztown, Seton Hall, Ramapo, Rider, etc. Sorry if I offended anyone!). And usually like one student gets into Rutgers. The last 5% usually directly enter the workforce, choose not to attend college, or go into the military. However, there was one graduate who went to Vassar three years ago. And two years ago, another girl went to Barnard. The last time anybody went to a “top” school was in 1967, when a male student got into Yale.</p>
<p>About 40% to 4 and 2 year colleges combined. </p>
<p>Of that 40%, less than half will actually graduate from college.</p>
<p>Most of my school goes directly to work/military after high school.</p>
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<p>Dude, White Bear is pretty crappy in a lot of areas, especially my area. The city has it’s own cute little “ghetto.”</p>
<p>About 50% of the class graduates, of that about 20% go to the huge state universities, 40% go to community college, 30% don’t go to college, and 10% go to one of the small privates in state or go out of state.</p>
<p>Ouch. My high school has a 75% drop out rate, 28% of our graduates attend community college, 15% attend California State University, 5% attend a University of California, and the rest go straight to work.</p>
<p>Like 95%. Which is ridiculously good for a public school in Philly. They tell you before you apply and consistently remind you that if your not going to college, don’t come here.</p>
<p>100% to four year colleges. That’s my school’s official statement.</p>
<p>Except, last year I knew a girl who took a year off to go to Africa, and she applied to college this year. So, like 99%, I guess.</p>