<p>Wharton is not harder to get into than Stern. the gpa/SAT stats are virtually identical.</p>
<p>Alan,</p>
<p>You are too pompous for me to help you. You know everything already.</p>
<p>To be honest, I was told that a lot of people at NYU are big time druggies. Some people do really messed up things. However, that is not to say that people at Wharton or Harvard are all that much better.</p>
<p>"Wharton is not harder to get into than Stern. the gpa/SAT stats are virtually identical."</p>
<p>I'd doubt that.</p>
<p>Alexandre, do you have statistics and/or past posts or know of statistics/past posts of Wharton/Harvard transfers?</p>
<p>try looking up the stats, stupid. you'll be disappointed when you see how dumb you are.</p>
<p>Harvard accepts 5% of transfer applicants.
<a href="http://www.admissions.college.harvard.edu/prospective/applying/transfer/%5B/url%5D">http://www.admissions.college.harvard.edu/prospective/applying/transfer/</a></p>
<p>Yale is usually even tougher on transfers than Harvard, accepting between 3% and 4%
<a href="http://www.yale.edu/asc/handbook/transfer.html%5B/url%5D">http://www.yale.edu/asc/handbook/transfer.html</a></p>
<p>Penn accepts roughly 12% of transfer applicants...but Wharton is probably more selective.
<a href="http://www.admissionsug.upenn.edu/applying/transindex.php%5B/url%5D">http://www.admissionsug.upenn.edu/applying/transindex.php</a></p>
<p>In the case of Michigan-Ross, I can tell you that about 200 out of staters apply for 15 places. The acceptance rate hovers around 10%. If you apply to Michigan's LSA college, the acceptance rate is roughly 35%.</p>
<p>I am sure Stern is very tough too, but they do not have transfer stats.</p>
<p>Northwestern and Chicago afre your bestbet. Chicago accepts roughly 20% of transfer applicants...Northwestern does not have the exact numbers, but I remember reading somewhere that it hovered around 30%</p>
<p>One thing to keep in mind is that most students who apply to transfer to these schools are applying from top universities and have top grades. Those who apply to Harvard and Yale are probably applying from schools like Georgetown, Cornell, Penn and other Ivies etc... and those who apply to transfer to Wharton are probably going top universities that do not have undergraduate Business programs.</p>
<p>Not statistics wise, I am well aware of their conveyance of seemingly impossible probablilities.
I was wondering if you knew statistics/profile of success candidates.
Statistics for transfer admissions matters very little, due to the disparate applicant pool as mentioned before, which is significantly different from that of regular admissions.</p>
<p>"One thing to keep in mind is that most students who apply to transfer to these schools are applying from top universities and have top grades. Those who apply to Harvard and Yale are probably applying from schools like Georgetown, Cornell, Penn and other Ivies etc... and those who apply to transfer to Wharton are probably going top universities that do not have undergraduate Business programs."</p>
<p>That is not true, actually. Just taking a sample survey from the CC transfer forum you will find that most applicants are from community colleges. But, that is not to say that there are no ivy students who are applying for transfer this year. Logically, this makes sense. How much marginal enjoyment would someone obtain by transferring from Princeton to Harvard? Or from Stanford to Penn? </p>
<p>Thanks for your help. If you have additional opinions that are solely based on factual profiles of past candidates please PM me.</p>
<p>Again. I already KNOW that I am in at Northwestern. What matters more is Wharton and Harvard. It would be uber helpful if someone knew stats of successful candidates for the past.</p>
<p>I was guaranteed transferred from the undergrad director of economics, who recruited me for an economics competition.</p>
<p>You don't have a shot in hell of getting into Stern or Wharton</p>
<p>Intimidated, are you?</p>
<p>My friend is actually right. This board is only good for getting statistics and not for opinions.</p>
<p>Ok, I'm outtie. Let you guys know by May.</p>
<p>Quakerman. If you want to do business, with the attitude that you have now, you will never make it to the street. I assume you are still in high school. Don't waste your time meandering around these boards are really go out there and exploit your youth. In order words, try to get a real job in the financial services industry. We'll see then how many people laugh at your resume and call YOU stupid. Perhaps then you will really know what kind of ***** intern I really am.</p>
<p>If you do make it, when you get the chance, ask someone how brilliant one must be in order to get a part-time internship as a corporate finance analyst at an investment bank in new york as a FRESHMAN. Thanks for your inputs. I'm outz.</p>