UC berkeley Haas school of business acceptance rate/stats?

<p>Anyone know what they are for transfer students?</p>

<p>8%</p>

<p><a href="http://students.berkeley.edu/files/Admissions/Transfer_07.pdf%5B/url%5D"&gt;http://students.berkeley.edu/files/Admissions/Transfer_07.pdf&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/p>

<p>Gah, so low, but then again I know that this is from all colleges in America, including out of state, UC to UC and other universities to UC. Do you know the specific acceptance rate of a California community college to UCB school of business (undergraduate)?</p>

<p>11% for in-state</p>

<p>5% for out-of-state</p>

<p>I wish they gave the interquartile range of GPA's for Haas admits only.</p>

<p>errrr.</p>

<p>more like 26% for people who can read english and fill out the app correctly</p>

<p><a href="http://www.haas.berkeley.edu/Undergrad/statstransfer.html%5B/url%5D"&gt;http://www.haas.berkeley.edu/Undergrad/statstransfer.html&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/p>

<p>thank you ^^^^ they cut around 500 people that don't follow the instructions, so that makes the acceptance rate better than it seems :D</p>

<p>Does anyone know the average GPA of a person admitted there, I know it says the average GPA of someone who is already enrolled but what about transfers?</p>

<p>well, incase you can't find it, i'd put it at around a 3.9.</p>

<p>Everyone I know applying to Haas has around a 3.9 GPA (both in community college transfer level and at UCB).</p>

<p>encouraging, johnnzenn</p>

<p>especially since the middle 80 percent have gpa's from 3.78-4.0</p>

<p>wait a minute. 4.0 is the max. gpa...and that's the gpa for admits..</p>

<p>is somebody else making the same connection i've already made? or is that a negative.</p>

<p>transfer GPAs need to be on par or better than enrolled GPA if you're transferring from a CC/lower college...if you're transferring from a higher ranked college in that specific area, then you can be a few .1s below</p>

<p>Huhhhhhh? Connection? No comprendo senor</p>

<p>look, the middle 80 percent of gpa's is 3.78 to 4.0. but the data is skewed really hardcore, as we can see from the fact that the MAX is the extreme end of the spectrum..so if we take into account that the data is skewed and that we have 80 percent of admits accounted for, that leaves 20 percent underneath the curve. what does that mean? it means that anywhere from 16-18 people get in every year with gpa's lower then 3.78 (or the year before that) 3.73. is this making sense? </p>

<p>however, as all of you obviously know, to be one of those coveted few means you have to be a ridiculously spectacular applicant. those handful are no joke. we can even infer that from the data across CC, but its of special interest when we come up against applicants who have much lower overall gpa's but HIGH prereq gpa's. are things starting to come clear into context, now?</p>

<p>Crystal clear. Man...talk about stiff competitition.</p>

<p>um, I hate to burst your bubble zemookmook, but its even worse.
If the middle 80% have a range of 3.78-4.0, that means that the top 10% also have 4.0's, so we actually have 90% of the admits accounted for, leaving only 10% underneath (rather than 20%, like you said, since 100-80=20, and we have 10 on the top and 10 on the bottom)</p>

<p>the numbas ares fishi!</p>

<p>Heh, what Nuveen said. Plus the released mean is a 3.91.</p>