Stats for applicants who attended Cornell Summer College and earned good grades?

<p>I was wondering if anyone knew of any?</p>

<p>cornell says attending the program doesn't increase your chances because not everyone can afford it. But I think getting good grades will improve your chances. Getting poor grades will hurt your chances.</p>

<p>again it also depends which major you did. i did architecture and since only 18 ppl get accepted in ED, getting good grades isn't the only requirement for admission since it's so competitive. Plus we got very thorough evaluations and those are more important than grades itself. but we'll see.</p>

<p>Well I know just attending doesn't improve your chances, but getting good grades and recommendations probably will, which is the real cause for any advantage. I'm just including all of this under "attending summer college."</p>

<p>it probably will. all the architecture professors refused to write recommendations. instead, they wrote evaluations for us that we will never be able to read. THis way, they can write whatever they want about us.</p>

<p>I see... I got a recommendation from my computer science professor and my sculpture professor... I applied to Agg with AEM 1st choice and Landscape Architecture 2nd choice. Any idea how hard the Landscape program is to get into?</p>

<p>JasonSK: I thought you were allowed to apply to only one of 7 colleges. How did do this 1st choice/2nd choice thingy?</p>

<p>You can choose two majors in CALS.</p>

<p>Next year you will be able to choose two colleges.</p>

<p>That would be nice :eek:</p>

<p>I did the Vet program and it was really really tough. I think that was because it was their first time doing the course we took in 3 weeks instead of a semester and they didn’t know what to cut back on etc. We had tons more work than everyone else but with a few all-nighters before quizzes and tests I came away with about a 90 average. Teacher never did recommendations because he says he doesn’t get to know us well enough to do that.</p>